Rachel Griffith

Dame Rachel Griffith

Born
Rachel Susan Griffith

(1963-05-16) 16 May 1963 (age 60)
NationalityBritish–American
Academic career
InstitutionsUniversity of Manchester
Institute for Fiscal Studies
Royal Economic Society
FieldEconomics
Alma materUniversity of Keele
AwardsBrigit Grodal Award 2014
Information at IDEAS / RePEc
Notes

Dame Rachel Susan Griffith DBE FBA FAcSS (born 16 May 1963) is a British-American academic and educator. She is professor of economics at the University of Manchester and a research director at the Institute for Fiscal Studies.

Griffith was president of the European Economic Association for 2015, making her the first woman to hold the position. She was also joint managing editor of The Economic Journal between 2011 and 2017.

Griffith holds both UK and US citizenship.

Biography

Griffith earned her BA degree magna cum laude in Economics from the University of Massachusetts, Boston in 1985, her MSc degree in econometrics and forecasting from the City of London Polytechnic in 1991, and her PhD from Keele University in 1999.

Griffith is currently Research Director of the IFS and co-director of the Centre for the Microeconomic Analysis of Public Policy (CPP). She was elected President of the Royal Economic Society from 2019 to 2020.

She is Professor of Economics at the University of Manchester, a Fellow of the British Academy, a Fellow of the Econometric Society, a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Economic Association and a Research Fellow of CEPR. Rachel won the Birgit Grodal award in 2014, was awarded a CBE in for services to economic policy in 2015 and was made a Dame for services to economic policy and education in 2021. She also served as Deputy Chair of the Economics sub-Panel of the Research Excellence Framework. Currently, she has her second ERC Advanced Grant to study behavior of consumers and firms to see how government policy will impact food markets.

Research

Obesity

Griffith's presidential address to the European Economic Association at the University of Mannheim, Germany entitled "Gluttony and Sloth? Labour Market Nonseparabilities and the Rise in Obesity", reflected her recent research into the relationship between changes in relative food prices and the nutritional quality of households’ shopping baskets.

Corporation tax

In her Royal Economic Society Public Lecture 2015, "Does Starbucks Pay Enough Tax", Griffith argued that corporate tax should be charged like VAT. Griffith stated that the current system of corporate taxation is outdated and taxing corporate profits in the location where value is created is not very meaningful. She suggested taxing profits at the destination of sales rather than at the source of profits would be an improvement. Griffith cited two papers, one by Auerbach and Devereux (2012), the other by Devereux and Vella (2014), in support of her case. Griffith's previous research in this area considers how influential corporate income taxes are in determining where firms choose to legally own intellectual property, i.e. the way in which intellectual property accounts for firms' assets and if they can be used by firms to shift income offshore to reduce their corporate income tax liability.

Honours and Fellowships

  • 1999 Research Fellow Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR)
  • 2011 Elected to the Fellowship of the British Academy (FBA).
  • 2011 - 2014 Fellow of the British Academy, Section Chair
  • 2014 Brigit Grodal Award.
  • 2015 Distinguished Achievement Medal - Researcher of the Year, University of Manchester Faculty of Humanities
  • 2015 President European Economic Association
  • 2015 The Schumpeter School Award for Business and Economic Analysis, Wuppertal Germany,
  • 2015 Commander of the British Empire (CBE) for services to economic policy
  • 2016 Elected as Fellow of the Econometric Society.
  • 2017 Elected a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS).
  • 2018-2019 Elected President of the Royal Economic Society
  • 2019-2021 Elected President of the Royal Economic Society

Griffith was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the 2021 New Year Honours for services to economic policy and education.

Bibliography

Thesis

  • Griffith, Rachel (1999). Taxes, the location of multinationals and productivity: an empirical analysis using panel data (PhD thesis). University of Keele. OCLC 556724027.

Books

Chapters in books

  • Griffith, Rachel; Blundell, Richard; Windmeijer, Frank (1995), "Dynamics and correlated Responses in longitudinal count data models", in Seeber, Gilg U.H.; Francis, Brian J.; Hatzinger, Reinhold; Steckel-Berger, Gabriele (eds.), Statistical modelling: proceedings of the 10th International Workshop on Statistical Modelling, Innsbruck, Austria, 10–14 July, 1995, Lecture Notes in Statistics Series: Volume 104, New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 35–42, ISBN 9780387945651 VIEW ONLINE
  • Griffith, Rachel; Bloom, Nicholas; Chennells, Lucy; Van Reenen, John (2002), "How has tax affected the changing cost of R&D? Evidence from eight countries", in Lawton Smith, Helen (ed.), The regulation of science and technology, Houndmills, Basingstoke, UK/New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 136–160, ISBN 9780230554528 AVAILABLE ONLINE
  • Griffith, Rachel; Simpson, Helen (2004), "Characteristics of foreign-owned firms on UK manufacturing productivity", in Card, David; Blundell, Richard; Freeman, Richard B. (eds.), Seeking a premier economy the economic effects of British economic reforms, 1980–2000, Chicago: University of Chicago Press for the NBER, pp. 147–80, ISBN 9780226092843 IFS WP01/10 PDF
  • Griffith, Rachel; Geroski, Paul (2004), "Identifying antitrust markets", in Neumann, Manfred; Weigand, Jürgen (eds.), The international handbook of competition, Cheltenham, UK/Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar, pp. 290–305, ISBN 9781845423520 IFS WP03/01 PDF
  • Griffith, Rachel; Hines, James; Sørensen, Peter Birch (2010), "International capital taxation", in Mirrlees, James (ed.), The Mirrlees Review: volume 1: dimensions of tax design (reforming the tax system for the 21st century), Oxford, UK/New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 914–1027, ISBN 9780199553754 IFS PDF
See also: The Mirrlees Review.

Academic outputs

  • Griffith, Rachel. “Product Market Competition, Creative Destruction and Innovation -.” The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 3 December 2021, ifs.org.uk/publications/15863.
  • Griffith, Rachel. “Price Floors and Externality Correction -.” The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 15 November 2021, ifs.org.uk/publications/15827.

Reports and comment

  • Freeman, Harold. “Surplus ACT: A Solution in Sight? -.” The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 1 September 1993, ifs.org.uk/publications/1915.
  • Chennells, Lucy. “Taxing Profits in a Changing World -.” The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 1 September 1997, ifs.org.uk/publications/1885.
  • Griffith, Rachel. “Productivity and the Role of Government -.” The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 1 November 1998, ifs.org.uk/publications/1886.
  • Dias, Monica Costa. “Getting People Back into Work -.” The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 4 May 2020, ifs.org.uk/publications/14829.
  • Griffith, Rachel. “Tackling Heavy Drinking through Tax Reform and Minimum Unit Pricing -.” The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 20 November 2020, ifs.org.uk/publications/15183.

Journal articles


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