Nitin is a postgraduate researcher pursuing a PhD in economics at the Leeds University Business School. He is primarily interested in financial macroeconomics and applied macroeconometrics using pluralist approaches. He has been trained in different strands of post-Keynesian theory. He studied financial and structuralist (Latin American) post-Keynesian economics under Jan Kregel. He was taught Modern Money Theory and Institutional post-Keynesian economics by Randy Wray and Pavlina Tcherneva. He trained in stock-flow consistent modelling and the Circuitist approach under Gennaro Zezza. His master’s thesis was supervised by Dimitri Papadimitriou. He has attended the Sraffian Summer School hosted by Centro Sraffa in Universita Roma Tre. Currently, he works on analytical dynamic macroeconomic models, dynamic causality, and identification in macroeconometrics under Karsten Kohler and Annina Kaltenbrunner.
Nitin is broadly interested in combining research on market macrostructure and demand system asset pricing to formulate a more realistic theory of portfolio choice where asset demand and liability supply (issue) functions are conditional on the nature of the investor, balance sheet characteristics, corporate governance and the properties of financial instruments. In a world where financial structures and asset markets increasingly shape real economic outcomes, such an approach provides a necessary foundation for modern macroeconomic models.
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