Jeremy Bowles
Jeremy, a British citizen, currently works as an economist at the International Growth Centre, a development economics research centre based at the London School of Economics and funded by DFID. He spent the summer of 2013 as a Google Policy Fellow at Bruegel, where he worked on a project linking competition to the standards of internet access across the EU and complementary issues in European internet policy.
He holds a BA in Philosophy, Politics and Economics from the University of Oxford and an MSc from the Oxford Internet Institute at the same university, and has previously worked for Chatham House in London and the UN Development Programme in Beijing.
His interests lie between technology and economic policy.
Featured work
The computerisation of European jobs
Who will win and who will lose from the impact of new technology onto old areas of employment? This is a centuries-old question but new literature, wh
Chart of the Week: 54% of EU jobs at risk of computerisation
If we believe that technology will be able to overcome traditional hurdles among non-routine cognitive tasks then we must equip the next generation of
Southern Europe is suspicious: the evolution of trust in the EU
Analysis of the eurozone crisis and its consequences has started to consider its social, as well as political and economic, dimensions. Bruegel analys
The Neutral Net in Europe: Reasons for Optimism
Events leading up to the forthcoming European Parliament plenary vote will be the litmus test of the political capital expended on promoting Europe as
All work
Blog post
24 July 2014
The computerisation of European jobs
Who will win and who will lose from the impact of new technology onto old areas of employment? This is a centuries-old question but new literature, wh
Blog post
24 July 2014
Chart of the Week: 54% of EU jobs at risk of computerisation
If we believe that technology will be able to overcome traditional hurdles among non-routine cognitive tasks then we must equip the next generation of
Blog post
14 May 2014
Southern Europe is suspicious: the evolution of trust in the EU
Analysis of the eurozone crisis and its consequences has started to consider its social, as well as political and economic, dimensions. Bruegel analys
Blog post
03 March 2014
The Neutral Net in Europe: Reasons for Optimism
Events leading up to the forthcoming European Parliament plenary vote will be the litmus test of the political capital expended on promoting Europe as
Blog post
08 January 2014
What Single Market?
“The commitment to complete the Digital Single Market by 2015 has to be delivered on: today's market fragmentation hampers the release of the dig