Economists and Research Contacts
Economists
Our economists conduct research in many areas of macro- and microeconomics. You can find out more about our economists and their work by clicking on the highlighted names below.
You can also view our economists based on their field of research.
- George Alessandria – Macroeconomics
- Mitchell Berlin – Banking, Section Head
- Gerald A. Carlino – Regional and Microeconomics
- Satyajit Chatterjee – Macroeconomics
- Michael Dotsey – Monetary Policy
- Ronel Elul – Banking
- R. Jason Faberman – Regional and Microeconomics
- Shigeru Fujita – Macroeconomics
- Rocco Huang – Banking
- Robert Hunt – Banking
- Aubhik Khan – Banking
- Keith Kuester – Macroeconomics
- Yaron Leitner – Banking
- Wenli Li – Banking
- Jeffrey Lin – Regional and Microeconomics
- Loretta J. Mester – Senior Vice President, Director of Research
- Stephen A. Meyer – Monetary Policy
- Cyril Monnet – Banking
- Leonard Nakamura – Regional and Microeconomics, Section Head
- Keith Sill – Macroeconomics
- Julia Thomas – Macroeconomics
- Kei-Mu Yi – Macroeconomics, Section Head
Research Contacts
Contact information for the various research publications released by the Philadelphia Fed are listed on our Contacts by Publications page.
- John Chew – Livingston Survey, Survey of Professional Forecasters
- Jim DiSalvo – Banking Brief, Third District Banking Markets
- Jason Novak – Regional Economy, State Coincident Indexes, Third District Leading Indexes
- Tim Schiller – Regional Economy
- Tom Stark – Greenbook Data Sets, Livingston Survey, Real-Time Data Set, Survey of Professional Forecasters
- Mike Trebing – Business Outlook Survey, Regional Economy, South Jersey Business Survey
Other Resources
- Central Bank Exchange Program Visitors
- Departmental Vita (PDF, 307 KB, 45 pages)
- Visiting Scholars
- Working as a Research Economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia by Loretta J. Mester, Senior Vice President and Director of Research. This brief article from the Newsletter of the Committee on the Status of Women in the Economics Profession presents an insider's perspective on the work of research economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. – (PDF, 402 KB, 2 pages)


