Curriculum Vitae
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Sushanta Kumar Mallick, Ph.D. School of Business and Management, Queen Mary, University of London, London E1 4NS, UK Tel: +44-(0)20-7882-7447 (direct); +44-(0)20-7882-3167 (Dept. Office); +44-(0)7816 618346 (mobile) Fax: +44 (0)20 7882 3615, Email: [email protected] ● http://webspace.qmul.ac.uk/skmallick/ _____________________________________________________________________________ Date of Birth : May 10, 1969 Gender & Nationality : Male; British Citizen [& Overseas Citizen of India (OCI)] Summary Statement: An experienced researcher with over 20 years of work experience ranging from academia to private financial industry, with published research in numerous international referred journals crossing the boundaries between international economics & finance, international business and development studies. My expertise involves not only analytical research but also competence in applied econometric modelling with extensive usage of specialised softwares (RATS/CATS, EViews, STATA, Matlab, and Dynare). My current research concentrates on, first, international issues involving exporters’ pricing behaviour in the aftermath of policy reforms (previously funded by British Academy), and the real effects of monetary, fiscal, & exchange rate shocks; second, financial issues covering the linkage between monetary policy & financial shocks, firm-level sources of financing & performance, and bank-level risk analysis with financial inclusion; third, development issues examining the linkages between macroeconomic policy & poverty reduction, consumption distance & social alienation (previously funded by Leverhulme Trust), and growth effects of human capital & rural financial development in low- income countries. For my published research, see my website above. Professional Experience Since 1 October 2011 – Professor of International Finance, School of Business and Management, Queen Mary, University of London, London, UK Other appointments: Co-Editor-in-Chief, Economic Modelling, Elsevier B.V., January 2015- Member, ESRC Peer Review College, 1 October 2015 - 30 September 2019 External Examiner, Birmingham Business School, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK [2014/15 - 2017/18] 1 October 2008 – 30 September 2011 Reader in International Finance, School of Business and Management, Queen Mary, University of London, London, UK 1 October 2006 – 30 September 2008 Senior Lecturer in International Finance, School of Business and Management, Queen Mary, University of London, London, UK 1 December 2003 – 30 September 2006 Lecturer, Department of Economics, Loughborough University, UK 1 October 2001 – 28 November 2003 Research Fellow, International Economics Programme, Royal Institute of International Affairs, London, UK; Responsibilities: Worked on two funded projects on ‘Global price transmission from China’, and ‘UK pension reforms and capital market development’. Prepared research grant proposals, & other duties included chairing research seminars at the Institute, occasional briefings & presentations, & media commentaries on economic issues. 1 6 January 1999 – 28 September 2001 Associate-Economist, Asia Credit Markets Research, JPMorgan Chase, Hong Kong (previously International Fixed Income Research, Chase Manhattan Asia, Hong Kong until December 2000); Nature of Job: During the three years of my research here, I wrote a number of pieces combining financial market, macroeconomic and political analysis on India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Korea, Philippines, Hong Kong, and China for investment strategy and credit risk with reference to external debt markets. My contributions were published in the daily reports, weekly review, and monthly outlook and strategy. I developed a spreadsheet-based consistency model to generate macroeconomic forecasts for a regular quarterly publication. I worked on a bond-trading floor, directly with traders, sales and debt capital markets teams, along with the clients. The outlook was both tactical and strategic. I found the macroeconomics of countries in the region and the anticipated bond performance as vital to come up with longer-term investment recommendations about relative value among Asia’s bonds. October 1995 - September 1998 Commonwealth Research Scholar and Part-time Tutor, Department of Economics, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK; [Worked on my Ph.D. research]. July 1991 - September 1995 Research Assistant, Institute for Social and Economic Change (ISEC), Bangalore, India [From January 1994 to September 1995, I was a Research Fellow under the Indian Council of Social Science Research (ICSSR) Salary-protected scheme and spent the year 1994 at the Economic Analysis Unit, Indian Statistical Institute, Bangalore]; Description of duties: Involved in providing expertise in the application of quantitative analysis in social science research and training, and preparing teaching materials in statistics and econometrics for the teaching program at the Institute. Also did macroeconometric modelling to examine the impact of stabilization and structural adjustment policies in the Indian economy. Research Grants Mallick, S. (Principal Investigator) and T. Mishra (co-investigator), Social Alienation and Uncertain Growth: A Study of Pre- and Post-Reform Periods in India, a research project grant funded by the Leverhulme Trust, RPG-2012-798, £78,738, January 2013 – March 2015. Banerji, S. (Principal Investigator) and Mallick, S. (Co-investigator), ‘Financial intermediation and economic growth in the state of Bihar, India: A district-level analysis’ funded by IGC (International Growth Centre: http://www.theigc.org/ ), £9,400, August 2011 - March 2012. Mallick, S., ‘Alternative Sources of Financing and Firm Performance’ funded by Seed-corn grant of £7,500 from School of Business and Management, Queen Mary University of London, 2010-2011. Mallick, S. (Principal Investigator), with H. Marques (Co-investigator), ‘Trade and Currency Reforms in India: How Exporting Firms Behave in the Global Market Place’, £6900, Sep 2007 – Aug 2009: Funded by British Academy Award under Small Research Grants, SG-46699. Mallick, S., ‘Estimating consumption deprivation as a measure of poverty and assessing the impact of policy reform’ Funded by British Academy Award under Small Research Grants, SG-40384, £5400, April 2005 – September 2006. Consulting / Policy Research experience June 2014-March 2015 –Worked on a joint project on bond market volatility, at the Monetary and Economic Department, at Bank for International Settlements, Basel, Switzerland 2 October 2009-March 2010 – Worked as a consultant on ‘Impact of Fiscal Policy in Developing Asia’ for Economics and Research Department at the Asian Development Bank, for their flagship publication ‘Asian Development Outlook 2010’. April-June 2004 – Worked as an economist/econometrician for a period of five weeks in a World- Bank funded project for the Government of Uganda on ‘privatization impact assessment in Uganda’, with team leader Nilgun Gokgur. Conducted questionnaire based field interviews with managers/financial executives of recently privatized enterprises across Central (Kampala, Entebee and Jinja), Western (Kasase and Fort Portal) and Southern (Kabale) regions of Uganda; and completed the enterprise and sectoral level data analysis and report. Also with the team leader, participated in interviews with officials at several Ministries and the Central Bank, and with managers at several corporate bodies. Education Ph.D. in Economics [October 1995 - December 1998], Department of Economics, University of Warwick, UK; Ph.D. Thesis Title: Modelling Macroeconomic Adjustment with Growth in Developing Economies: The Case of India [Completed under the supervision of Professor Kenneth F. Wallis] M.A. in Economics [July 1989 - May 1991], University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad, India [Passed in first division obtaining 70% marks with specialisation in Mathematical Economics & Econometrics] B.A.(Hons.) in Economics [July 1986 - May 1989], Utkal University, Orissa, India [Passed with first class honours in Economics and distinction] Teaching, Supervision and Administration Currently lecturing on Corporate Finance for Managers at M.Sc. level and International Business Finance at 2nd year UG level (previously taught Financial Management at final year UG level for 6 years) at Queen Mary (ad-hoc lecturing on International Finance at PG level at XIMB, India), along with Masters and 4 Ph.D. dissertations supervision; Admin roles performed so far include Director of International Relations, UG Programme Director, UG Senior Tutor, and Chair of Staff-Student Liaison and Extenuating Circumstances Committees, and member of Management, Teaching & Learning, and Research Strategy Committees. Lectured on Intermediate Macroeconomics for 2nd year UG course, Economics of Monetary Integration for 3rd year UG course, Development Finance for M.Sc. programme, Economics of Developing Countries for 3rd year UG course; taught Intermediate Macroeconomics for 2nd year UG tutorials, and supervised two Ph.D. students at Loughborough University. Involved in UG small-group class teaching at the Department of Economics, University of Warwick from 1995-96 to 1997-98. The courses taught are: Quantitative Techniques I & II (1st year courses); Economic Statistics and Econometrics (2nd year course); Econometric Theory (3rd year course). Lectured on Macroeconomic Modelling in India, in the ICSSR-Sponsored Research Methodology Course in Economics, June 6, 1995, and on Endogenous Growth Theory, in the UGC-Sponsored Refresher Course in Development