Albert Bravo-Biosca
Senior Economist in NESTA
Albert is Senior Economist at NESTA, where he joined in 2007. His work has been at the intersection of innovation and finance. His research projects have explored some of the drivers of innovation activity and venture capital performance, as a well as the contribution of firm dynamics and intangibles to productivity growth.
He holds a PhD in Economics from Harvard University, an MSc in Economics from the London School of Economics, and a BA in Economics from Universitat Pompeu Fabra. He is also guest professor at the Barcelona Graduate School of Economics and has been visiting economist at the OECD.Albert is Senior Economist at NESTA, where he joined in 2007. His work has been at the intersection of innovation and finance. His research projects have explored some of the drivers of innovation activity and venture capital performance, as a well as the contribution of firm dynamics and intangibles to productivity growth.
He holds a PhD in Economics from Harvard University, an MSc in Economics from the London School of Economics, and a BA in Economics from Universitat Pompeu Fabra. He is also guest professor at the Barcelona Graduate School of Economics and has been visiting economist at the OECD.
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Albert Bravo-Biosca
Senior Economist in NESTA
30 Mar 2017 | Bankinter
Education for Change
After much thought, I think it's an unanswered question. At least without the answer he would expect more immediately, aware as I am of the relative percentage of influence of my passing through the school-university in the person I am today, and that there is a huge difference between the studies I took and my Further work. The world no longer works with the logic of studying a career and dedicate to it the rest of your life. My studies prepared me for a world different from the one I found, a trend that today, 15 years later, is clearly more pronounced.