Luke Connelly is Professor of Health
Economics at the Centre for the
Business and Economics of Health. He
also holds a Professorial appointment
(part-time) at The University of
Bologna, to which he was appointed in
2017 via the Italian “Direct Call”
([link](https://www.unibo.it/sitoweb/luke.connelly/en))
process. In 2019 he was appointed as
Honorary Professor at The University
of Sydney. His main interests are in
health economics and insurance
economics and the effects of
institutions (including legal
constructs) on incentives and
behaviour. He has also worked in other
fields of applied microeconomics,
including education economics and
transport economics. His publications
include papers in *Review of Income
and Wealth*, *Health Economics*,
*Journal of Health Economics*,
*Journal of Risk and Insurance*,
*Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance*,
*Accident Analysis and Prevention*,
*Journal of Law and Medicine*,
*Journal of Clinical Epidemiology*,
*European Journal of Health
Economics*, *International Journal of
Health Economics and Finance*, *Social
Science and Medicine*, *Economic
Papers*, *Economic Analysis and
Policy*, *Journal of Transport
Economics and Policy*, *Labour
Economics*, *Economics and Human
Biology* as well as in a range of
clinical journals, including *Lancet*.
Luke has served on a number of public
committees including the Medical
Services Advisory Committee (MSAC),
which advises the Australian Minister
for Health on the safety, efficacy,
effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness
of new and extant listings on
Australia's Medicare Benefits
Schedule. He has extensive service on
other public committees and taskforces
as well as extensive teaching and
consulting engagements with industry.
Over his career he has been a chief
investigator on research grants and
contracts totalling more than $67m. He
is a member of the Editorial Boards of
European Journal of Health Economics
and the International Journal on
Environmental Research and Public
Health. He is a member of the
International Health Economics
Association's Arrow Awards Committee,
which awards an annual prize in honour
of Nobel Laureate Kenneth Arrow for
the best paper in the field. He is
currently Guest Editor (with
Christophe Courbage) on a Special
Issue of the Geneva Papers on Risk and
Insurance on Insurance and Emerging
Health Risks. His current research
interests include health service
innovations to improve the health of
people with chronic kidney
disease(CKD). Ongoing interests
include the economics of disability
and insurance, compensable injury
compensation schemes, and the
determinants of health. Luke enjoys
and has considerable experience
teaching economics and health
economics at both the graduate and
undergraduate levels. In 2014 he was
awarded the School of Economics
Distinguished Teaching Award for his
teaching on UQ's Master of Health
Economics Program. In July 2016 and
July 2019 he also taught summer
schools in Health Economics and the
Economics of Insurance at The
University of Lucerne, Switzerland.
Over the past 10 years he has been a
chief investigator on grants totalling
more than $70m.