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Jonathan Rothwell

Jonathan Rothwell

Nonresident Senior Fellow - Brookings Metro

Jonathan Rothwell is Gallup’s Principal Economist, where he researches and publishes on a broad range of social science topics and advises Gallup clients and associates on research questions and analytics, particularly in the areas of higher education, job quality, the effects of trade and technology on the labor market, and entrepreneurship. Rothwell occasionally contributes to the New York Times’s Upshot column and is author of the book “A Republic of Equals: A Manifesto for a Just Society,” published by Princeton University Press. Rothwell is also a visiting scholar at the George Washington Institute of Public Policy.

While at Gallup, Rothwell scholarly publications have included an analysis of who supported various presidential candidates during the 2016 election, the causes of slowing U.S. productivity growth, the effect of trade competition on regional economic outcomes, and the validity of using consumer ratings to assess colleges. He has also published several articles about the economic and social consequences of COVID-19, including partisan polarization, how information affects consumer behavior and policy preferences, and how disease-suppression policies affected job losses around the world. In collaboration with Andre Perry and other Brookings scholars, Rothwell has been actively involved in research studying the assets of majority-Black neighborhoods and the social factors that predict healthy lives for Black Americans.

Before joining Gallup, Rothwell was a fellow at Brookings Metro. Rothwell  frequently published research on issues such as trade; innovation; zoning and housing markets; education; college quality; the supply and demand for skills; residential segregation by income, race and ethnicity; and the causes of income inequality. Rothwell was a regular contributor to Social Mobility Memos, the Brookings blog on social mobility. In 2015, Rothwell was commissioned by the National Academies of Science to define “skilled technical work.”

Rothwell received a PhD in Public Affairs from Princeton University in 2009.

Jonathan Rothwell is Gallup’s Principal Economist, where he researches and publishes on a broad range of social science topics and advises Gallup clients and associates on research questions and analytics, particularly in the areas of higher education, job quality, the effects of trade and technology on the labor market, and entrepreneurship. Rothwell occasionally contributes to the New York Times’s Upshot column and is author of the book “A Republic of Equals: A Manifesto for a Just Society,” published by Princeton University Press. Rothwell is also a visiting scholar at the George Washington Institute of Public Policy.

While at Gallup, Rothwell scholarly publications have included an analysis of who supported various presidential candidates during the 2016 election, the causes of slowing U.S. productivity growth, the effect of trade competition on regional economic outcomes, and the validity of using consumer ratings to assess colleges. He has also published several articles about the economic and social consequences of COVID-19, including partisan polarization, how information affects consumer behavior and policy preferences, and how disease-suppression policies affected job losses around the world. In collaboration with Andre Perry and other Brookings scholars, Rothwell has been actively involved in research studying the assets of majority-Black neighborhoods and the social factors that predict healthy lives for Black Americans.

Before joining Gallup, Rothwell was a fellow at Brookings Metro. Rothwell  frequently published research on issues such as trade; innovation; zoning and housing markets; education; college quality; the supply and demand for skills; residential segregation by income, race and ethnicity; and the causes of income inequality. Rothwell was a regular contributor to Social Mobility Memos, the Brookings blog on social mobility. In 2015, Rothwell was commissioned by the National Academies of Science to define “skilled technical work.”

Rothwell received a PhD in Public Affairs from Princeton University in 2009.

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