Associate Professor (Reader) in Finance and Accounting, UCL
Rama Kanungo is an Associate Professor (Reader) in Finance and Accounting at GBSH, UCL and a Senior Fellow of HEA. He is also the Finance route lead for the MSc Global Healthcare Management programme.
Rama’s research is largely interdisciplinary by nature, where the dominant theme of his research sits across complementary subject tracks that include Finance, Innovation for well-being, Fintech, AI, Financial Inclusion, Financial markets and Institutions. He combines several theoretical constructs from Finance, International Business, well-being and Industrial relations to enrich the context of his studies. He believes in the tangibility of research that is central to theory generation and validation has a profound societal significance which is interesting and equally compelling to explore through the lenses of interdisciplinary and cross-disciplinary research. To this end, he has widely published in world leading journals, books, media outlets and parliamentary reports. His written evidence published by the Parliamentary Select Committee relating to COVID-19 and the House of Lords Select Committee on Financial Exclusion has been published and cited by many media outlets including the British Parliament, BBC, FT, Reuter, Financial Inclusion Commission etc.
He has undertaken national and international collaborations through publication and grant applications together with co-authors from universities across several countries and he has been actively engaged with a number of industry immersive initiatives by the New York Institute of Finance (NYIF), CIMA, ACCA, Bloomberg, Volvecube and FitchConnect to enrich teaching and research provision. For his excellent teaching, Rama has received the Best Postgraduate Teaching award and was nominated for the Outstanding Teaching Excellence award while working at Newcastle University.
Why is the London Stock Exchange losing out to the US
Apr 24, 2024 09:36 am UTC| Economy Business
London Stock Exchange (LSE), which can trace its heritage to the coffee houses of the 17th century, is failing. The volume of shares traded is sharply declining, and some UK companies are swiftly moving to the US...
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