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Organizations & Markets

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

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Organizations & Markets Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Organizations & Markets

How useful are aggregate measures of systemic risk?

Authors
Harry Mamaysky
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Alternative Investments

Following the financial crisis of 2008–2009, a large literature has emerged that attempts to quantify and measure systemic risk. In this paper we focus on some of the more popular systemic risk indicators from this literature and ask how well they work, in the following sense: At the aggregate level, what information above that which is readily observable in the market do we learn from these systemic risk indicators?

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Improvisation in Management

Authors
Paul Ingram and William Duggan
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Chapter
Book
Oxford Handbook of Critical Improvisation Studies

Improvisation is informing new models for strategy and organization design and determining how improvisation can create more productive interactions between individuals in an organization. Management research offers something to the study of improvisation in the form of evidence that groups that combine access to diverse ideas with internal cohesion are more creative and better able to develop those ideas into effective products and performances.

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Multicultural identity processes

Authors
Ying-Yi Hong, S. Zhan, Michael Morris, and Veronica Benet-Martinez
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Current Opinion in Psychology

The study of multicultural identity has gained prominence in recent decades and will be even more urgent as the mobility of individuals and social groups becomes the "new normal." This paper reviews the state-of-the-art theoretical advancements and empirical discoveries of multicultural identity processes at the intrapersonal, interpersonal, and collective (e.g., organizational, societal) levels. First, biculturalism has more benefits for individuals’ psychological and sociocultural adjustment than monoculturalism.

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Optimal consumption and savings with stochastic income and recursive utility

Authors
Chong Wang, Neng Wang, and Jinqiang Yang
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Economic Theory

We develop a tractable incomplete-markets model with an earnings process Y subject to permanent shocks and borrowing constraints. Financial frictions cause the marginal (certainty equivalent) value of wealth W to be greater than unity and decrease with liquidity w=W/Y. Additionally, financial frictions cause consumption to decrease with this endogenously determined marginal value of liquidity. Risk aversion and the elasticity of inter-temporal substitution play very different roles on consumption and the dispersion of w.

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Who Owns the World’s Media? Media Concentration and Ownership around the World

Authors
Eli Noam
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Book
Publisher
Oxford University Press

Media concentration has been an issue around the world. To some observers the power of large corporations has never been higher. To others, the Internet has brought openness and diversity. What perspective is correct? The answer has significant implications for politics, business, culture, regulation, and innovation. It addresses a highly contentious subject of public debate in many countries around the world. In this discussion, one side fears the emergence of media empires that can sway public opinion and endanger democracy.

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Adaptive appraisals of anxiety moderate the association between cortisol reactivity and performance in salary negotiations

Authors
Modupe Akinola, Ilona Fridman, Shira Mor, Michael Morris, and Alia Crum
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
PLOS ONE

Prior research suggests that stress can be harmful in high-stakes contexts such as negotiations. However, few studies actually measure stress physiologically during negotiations, nor do studies offer interventions to combat the potential negative effects of heightened physiological responses in negotiation contexts. In the current research, we offer evidence that the negative effects of cortisol increases on negotiation performance can be reduced through a reappraisal of anxiety manipulation.

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Collective hormonal profiles predict group performance

Authors
Modupe Akinola, Elizabeth Page-Gould, Pranjal Mehta, and Jackson Lu
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Prior research has shown that an individual's hormonal profile can influence the individual's social standing within a group. We introduce a different construct — a collective hormonal profile — which describes a group's hormonal make-up. We test whether a group's collective hormonal profile is related to its performance. Analysis of 370 individuals randomly assigned to work in 74 groups of three to six individuals revealed that group-level concentrations of testosterone and cortisol interact to predict a group's standing across groups.

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A Model of Unorganized and Organized Retailing in Emerging Economies

Authors
Kinshuk Jerath, S Sajeesh, and Z. John Zhang
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Marketing Science

In the last two decades, organized retailing has transformed the retailing landscape in emerging economies, where unorganized retailing has traditionally been dominant. In this paper, we build a theoretical model of unorganized and organized retailing in emerging economies by carefully modeling key characteristics of the retailing environment, the retailers, the consumers, and product categories.

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Social Responsibility Messages and Worker Wage Requirements: Field Experimental Evidence from Online Labor Marketplaces

Authors
Vanessa Burbano
Date
January 1, 2016
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Organization Science

This paper examines the effects of employer social responsibility on the wages workers demand through randomized field experiments in two online labor marketplaces. Workers were recruited for short-term jobs and I manipulated whether or not they received information about the employer's social responsibility. I then observed the payment workers were willing to accept for the job.

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