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Globalization

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Globalization Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Globalization Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Globalization

Preserving Slave Families for Profit: Traders' Incentives and Pricing in the New Orleans Slave Market

Authors
Charles Calomiris and Jonathan Pritchett
Date
January 1, 2009
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Journal of Economic History

We investigate determinants of slave family discounts in the New Orleans slave market. We find large price discounts for families unrelated to scale effects, childcare costs, legal restrictions, or transport costs. We posit that because family members voluntarily cared for each other, sellers sometimes found it advantageous to keep families together (when families included needy or dependent members). Evidence from ship manifests carrying slaves for sale in New Orleans provides direct evidence for selectivity bias in explaining slave family discounts.

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Resolving the puzzle of the underissuance of national bank notes

Authors
Charles Calomiris and Joseph Mason
Date
September 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Explorations in Economic History

Much of the puzzle of underissuance of national bank notes can be resolved for the period 1880–1900 (the period when detailed, bank-level data are available) by disaggregating, taking account of regulatory limits, and considering differences in banks' opportunity costs cross-sectionally and over time. Banks with poor lending opportunities issued more, within regulatory limits. Banks tended to issue more when bond yields (the backing for notes) were high relative to lending opportunities.

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Estimation of De Facto Exchange Rate Regimes: Synthesis of the Techniques for Inferring Flexibility and Basket Weights

Authors
Jeffrey Frankel and Shang-Jin Wei
Date
July 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
IMF Staff Papers

This paper offers a new approach to estimate countries' de facto exchange rate regimes, a synthesis of two techniques. One is a technique that the authors have used in the past to estimate implicit de facto weights when the hypothesis is a basket peg with little flexibility. The second is a technique used by others to estimate the de facto degree of exchange rate flexibility when the hypothesis is an anchor to the dollar or some other single major currency, but with a possibly substantial degree of flexibility around that anchor.

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In Search of a Euro Effect: Big Lessons from a Big Mac Meal?

Authors
David Parsley and Shang-Jin Wei
Date
March 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of International Money and Finance

Was the adoption of the euro accompanied by an increase in prices? Did it promote goods market arbitrage in the form of faster convergence to a common price? By comparing the experience of eurozone countries to non-euro European countries in a "difference-in-differences" specification, we net out effects on prices unrelated to the euro. We find neither evidence of significant price increases associated with the euro, nor evidence of a significant improvement in market integration.

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Sustaining India's Growth Miracle

Authors
Jagdish Bhagwati and Charles Calomiris
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Book
Publisher
Columbia University Press

The economy of India is growing at a rate of 8 percent per year, and its exports of goods and services have more than doubled in the past three years. Considering these trends, economists, scholars, and political leaders across the globe are beginning to wonder whether India's growth can be sustained.

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International Financial Management

Authors
Geert Bekaert and Robert Hodrick
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Book
Publisher
Prentice Hall

Bekaert and Hodrick equip future business leaders with the analytical tools they need to make sound financial decisions in the face of a competitive global environment. For undergraduate and graduate students enrolled in an international finance course.

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Marketing Metrics Use in a Transition Economy: The Case of Vietnam

Authors
John Farley, Scott Hoenig, Donald Lehmann, and Hoang Nguyen
Date
January 1, 2008
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of International Consumer Marketing

This article explores the use of marketing metrics by a sample of Vietnamese firms, providing an example of the use of marketing metrics in a "transition" economy as it grows and becomes more market and marketing driven. The analysis reports usage frequency and then develops a set of "correlation chains" linking firm characteristics, metric use, and various indicators of performance. Vietnamese managers generally report that several types of metrics are used. Ownership structure and industry also impact which metrics are utilized.

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A Prism into the PPP Puzzles: The Microfoundations of Big Mac Real Exchange Rates

Authors
David Parsley and Shang-Jin Wei
Date
October 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Economic Journal

We match Big Mac prices with prices of its ingredients as a unique prism to study real exchange rates (RERs). This approach has several advantages. First, the levels of the Big Mac RER can be measured meaningfully. Second, as the exact composition of a Big Mac is known, the contributions of its tradable and non-tradable components can be estimated relatively precisely. Third, the dynamics of the RER can be studied in a setting free of several biases inherent in CPI-based RERs. Finally, a large cross-country dimension allows us to overturn the Engel result on what drives RERs.

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Assessing China's Exchange Rate Regime

Authors
Jeffrey Frankel and Shang-Jin Wei
Date
October 1, 2007
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Economic Policy

This paper examines two related issues: (a) the implicit methodology used by the U.S. Treasury in determining whether China and America's other trading partners manipulate their exchange rates, and (b) the nature of the Chinese exchange rate regime since July 2005.

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