Biography

I am a 5th year PhD Candidate of Economics at American University, Washington DC. My Research focuses on Policy‐shock and macroeconomic efficiency, modeling on broader macroeconomic dynamics and structural approaches with input-output and production‐network analysis. My job market paper develops a two-sector IO-New Keynesian DSGE model with Rotemberg price-adjustment frictions. The framework embeds a structural antitrust shock, modeled as a change in the Dixit-Stiglitz elasticity that compresses upstream markups, and quantifies how this propagates through production linkages and policy responses.


I have served as an Adjunct Faculty member at American University at the Department of Economics since August 2023. Additionally, I worked as a Development Impact Measurement (Short-Term Consultant) at the International Finance Corporation (IFC), World Bank Group from July 2024 to June 2025, where I revamped SAM multiplier methodology to incorporate impact analysis framework into transport infrastructure models for economy-wide estimates for over 35 countries, and corporate reporting.


My research interests include dynamic macroeconomic modeling: input-output production networks, antitrust policy, industrial policy design for climate‐sustainable development, tax policy and public finance, inequality and welfare; with parallel interest in forecasting and econometric analysis of macro series, including monetary-policy transmission, exchange-rate dynamics, and currency crises.



I am on the 2025-2026 job market, and available for interviews. You may find my CV and job market paper.