Phillips Academy Andover  ·  Est. 2004

Economics beyond the classroom.

The Andover Economics Society is a student-run organization that publishes academic research, competes in Federal Reserve programs, and brings economists and policy professionals to campus.

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20+
Years active
1
Published journal issue
2
Guest speakers this year
Fed
Challenge 2026 entrant

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Decision Lab

4-minute experiment

How biases shape your choices

Test yourself on four cognitive biases that influence real decisions in policy, hiring, voting, and pricing. See exactly which mechanisms affected your choices and why they matter.

Start the experiment →

What we do

AES was founded in 2004 by Conor Sutherland and James Kelly. In the two decades since, members have published in the Andover Economics Review, competed in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's High School Fed Challenge, and brought policy researchers from the Pioneer Institute and the Boston Municipal Research Bureau to campus through the colloquium series, where students also write and present policy briefs to outside economists.

The club runs on three terms. Fall is content-heavy, with weekly meetings covering economic theory and policy; winter brings guest speakers and research projects; spring is for papers, the journal, and a research symposium. New members are welcome at any point in the year.


Programs

What's happening this year

Publication

Andover Economics Review

The first high school economics journal written by and for high school students, funded by the Abbot Academy Fund. The Winter 2025 issue is available now.

Read the issue →

Competition

High School Fed Challenge 2026

AES submitted its entry in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's annual research competition in March 2026. This year's theme: the Economics of Music.

About the competition →

Speaker series

Research Colloquium

The colloquium runs a speaker track and a policy brief research track. Past guests include Andrew Mikula of the Pioneer Institute and Grant Farrington of the Boston Municipal Research Bureau. Students present completed briefs to outside economists and Boston policymakers.

See the archive →

Get involved

Meetings are held Thursdays in CLC. No prior economics coursework is required. Members range from students taking their first economics class to those already doing independent research.

If you want to write for the journal, join the Fed Challenge team, or present at the spring symposium, reach out to the board or show up to any Thursday meeting.

Contact the board