Applied micro-economist with research interests in labour, development, and environmental economics.

Portrait of a young woman with long dark hair, glasses, and a black top, standing against a white wall.
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I completed my PhD in Economics at The University of Queensland in 2024, where my thesis, “Essays on Natural Disaster and Labour Market,” explored how natural disasters affect migration, wage inequality, and sectoral employment across economies.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                      My previous work examines credit-market imperfections, gender wage inequality, and public employment programs, contributing to a broader understanding of how institutional and environmental constraints shape growth and distributional outcomes. I aim to extend this agenda by incorporating insurance markets and climate risk into heterogeneous-agent general equilibrium models to study economic resilience. 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                          Currently, I am a Sessional Lecturer at the UQ School of Economics, where I teach undergraduate and postgraduate courses in macroeconomics. My teaching emphasises clarity, engagement, inclusivity, and analytical thinking.