Zoe is Head of Data Services. She joined the IFS in 1998 as a researcher and moved into Data Services in 2011. Her role involves overseeing all aspects of data-related activities at the Institute. This includes managing existing datasets, negotiating access to new datasets, setting up linkages to administrative data and taking responsibility for data security.
Education
MSc (Distinction) Economics, Birkbeck, University of London, 2001
BA (1st Class) Economics, University of Liverpool, 1998
Event
9 March 2009 at 12:30<p>7 Ridgmount Street<br />London<br />WC1E 7AE</p>
This presentation will look at what inflation means and how it is calculated. We will also discuss the effects of inflation on different demographic groups in the population and the trends over time.
This chapter is part of a volume which addresses the relationship between health and economic status, including why health behaviours vary across populations and how socioeconomic measures correlate with health outcomes.
This Commentary looks at the inflation experience (based on the RPI) for different groups of households, focusing in particular on pensioner households.
In this paper, we identify methodological differences and similarities in the measurement of wealth using survey data constructed for different purposes in the United Kingdom and England.
In a world of declining state pension provision, it is becoming increasingly important that individuals are able to understand the financial choices they face and can choose savings products, portfolios and contribution rates accordingly.
This paper presents the trends seen over the last quarter of the 20th Century in various indicators of the well-being of the elderly alongside those seen for the young.
This articles sets out to assess the relative heath status of older individuals in England and the United States, especially how their health status varies by important indicators of socioeconomic position.
In this paper we look at numerical ability and other dimensions of cognitive function in a sample of older adults in England and examine the extent to which these abilities are correlated with various measures of wealth and retirement saving outcomes.