In November 2010, INET announced that about $7 million would be provided for the inaugural round of grants. Another four task groups tled by INET advisory board members were awarded more than $3 million in grants in 2010. One of these awards was to
Steven Pincus of
Yale and James Robinson of
Harvard for research on the origins of the
British Industrial Revolution. In 2011, $4 million in grants from INET and the
Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) was divided among 29 recipients. The Institute has disbursed approximately $4 million annually in research grants to students and professors. The Cambridge-INET Institute (co-funded with
William H. Janeway) established an advanced institute for economic thinking at the
University of Cambridge, The Cambridge-INET Institute was endowed witha $3.75 million grant from INET that was matched with an additional $3.75 million grant from the Keynes Fund for Applied Economics, Isaac Newton Trust,
Mohammed El Erian, the Cambridge Endowment for Research in Finance, and the
University of Cambridge Faculty of Economics. Professor
Sanjeev Goyal held the position of inaugural director of Cambridge-INET. On 1 August 2021, the Cambridge INET moved and became a part of the Faculty of Economics at the new Janeway Institute Cambridge. Similar collaborations exist with the INET at the
Oxford Martin School, co-funded by
James Martin in 2012, as well as the INET Center on Imperfect Knowledge Economics (IKE) at the
University of Copenhagen. INET Oxford works with scholars from the University of Oxford as well as the Saïd Business School, the Department of International Development, the Department of Mathematics and the Department of Economics. In November 2013, INET provided a $250,000 grant to the
University College London for the establishment of its Center for the Study of Decision-Making Uncertainty. It also agreed to match 50% on top of the total raised from other donors. ==Programs and projects==