Patrick Schneider on household finance and the legacies of institutions聽
From household liquidity to UK鈥檚 productivity, Dr Schneider brings a unique voice in the research landscape
Patrick Schneider has joined the 91桃色 Business School as Assistant Professor of Economics. Specialising in the intersection of macroeconomics, household finance and public economics, Dr Schneider鈥檚 work highlights how policies designed to stabilise the economy affect different groups across society.聽
His current research investigates unconventional macroeconomic stabilisation policies, including the economic and behavioural impacts of early access to retirement savings. Dr Schneider鈥檚 work combines rigorous empirical analysis with policy relevance, contributing to a deeper understanding of fiscal interventions and household financial decision-making in dynamic economic environments.聽
Patrick earned his PhD at the London School of Economics (LSE) where his research focused on how households and firms respond to liquidity constraints and behavioural frictions. His recent work includes 鈥淗ousehold Liquidity Policy鈥 (with Patrick Moran), which examines how early access to retirement accounts works as an alternative to conventional stimulus, and how the two differ in their long-term implications.聽聽
Translating real-world economic challenges into classroom insights
Before his academic career, Patrick worked as an economist at the Bank of England (2015鈥18), contributing to high-level policy debates on Brexit and the UK productivity slowdown. He has also held roles in management consulting and the financial sector, and more recently as a macro research intern at Eisler Capital. His policy insights are reflected in publications such as 鈥溾 (Bank of England Working Paper).聽
One of his working papers 鈥溾 sheds light on the UK productivity puzzle. Dr Schneider utilised a new decomposition method to show the puzzle is accounted for by a composition effect - workers moving into firms with less productive characteristics - and that this effect is concentrated in the top end of the distribution.
Another more recent paper for the Centre for Economic Performance, 鈥淒isunited Kingdom? Brexit, Trade and Scottish Independence鈥 was co-authored with Hanwei Huang and Thomas Sampson and looks at the impact of independence and rejoining the EU for Scottish trade and incomes.聽
A committed teacher, Patrick has taught widely across economics and public policy at LSE, earning an LSE Class Teacher Award in 2024 for excellence in teaching.聽
Dr Schneider is keen to equip the next generation of entrepreneurs and said: 鈥淚鈥檓 most excited to work with our students. Understanding economics is essential to functioning in today鈥檚 world, and I want to help our students tool up for their futures.鈥澛