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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

Community Constraints on the Efficacy of Elite Mobilization: The Issues of Currency Substitutes during the Panic of 1907

Authors
Lori Yue
Date
May 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Journal of Sociology`

Organizing collective action to secure support from local communities provides a source of power for elites to protect their interests, but community structures constrain the ability of elites to use this power. Elites’ power is not static or self-perpetuating but changing and dynamic. There are situations in which elites are forced into movement-like struggles to mobilize support from their community.

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Bad Environments, Good Environments: A Non-Gaussian Asymmetric Volatility Model

Authors
Geert Bekaert, Eric Engstrom, and Andrey Ermolova
Date
May 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Econometrics

We propose an extension of standard asymmetric volatility models in the generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (GARCH) class that admits conditional non-Gaussianities in a tractable fashion. Our "bad environment-good environment" (BEGE) model utilizes two gamma-distributed shocks and generates a conditional shock distribution with time-varying heteroskedasticity, skewness, and kurtosis. The BEGE model features nontrivial news impact curves and closed-form solutions for higher-order moments.

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On the Design of Contingent Capital with a Market Trigger

Authors
M. Suresh Sundaresan and Zhenyu Wang
Date
April 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

Contingent capital (CC), which intends to internalize the costs of too-big-to-fail in the capital structure of large banks, has been under intense debate by policy makers and academics. We show that CC with a market trigger, in which direct stake-holders are unable to choose optimal conversion policies, does not lead to a unique competitive equilibrium, unless value transfer at conversion is not expected ex-ante. The "no value transfer" restriction precludes penalizing bank managers for taking excessive risk.

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Exporting and Firm Performance: Evidence from a Randomized Trial

Authors
David Atkin, Amit Khandelwal, and Adam Osman
Date
April 1, 2015
Format
Working Paper

We conduct a randomized control trial that generates exogenous variation in the access to foreign markets for rug producers in Egypt. Using this methodology and detailed survey data, we causally identify the impact of exporting on firm performance. Treatment firms report 15–25 percent higher profits and exhibit large improvements in quality alongside reductions in quantity-based productivity relative to control firms. These findings do not simply reflect firms being offered higher margins to manufacture high-quality products that take longer to produce.

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Macroeconomic Regimes

Authors
Lieven Baele, Geert Bekaert, Seonghoon Cho, Koen Inghelbrecht, and Antonio Moreno
Date
March 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Monetary Economics

We estimate a New-Keynesian macro model accommodating regime-switching behavior in monetary policy and in macro shocks. Key to our estimation strategy is the use of survey-based expectations for inflation and output. We identify accommodating monetary policy before 1980, with activist monetary policy prevailing most but not 100% of the time thereafter. Systematic monetary policy switched to the activist regime in the 2000-2005 period through an aggressive lowering of interest rates.

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Shortfall Aversion

Authors
Paolo Guasoni, Gur Huberman, and Dan Ren
Date
February 1, 2015
Format
Working Paper

Shortfall aversion reflects the higher utility loss of a spending cut from a reference point than the utility gain from a similar spending increase, in the spirit of Prospect Theory's loss aversion. This paper posits a model of utility of spending scaled by a function of past peak spending, called target spending. The discontinuity of the marginal utility at the target spending corresponds to shortfall aversion.

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Mark-up and Cost Dispersion Across Firms: Direct Evidence from Producer Surveys in Pakistan

Authors
David Atkin, Azam Chaudhry, Amit Khandelwal, and Eric Verhoogen
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
American Economic Review: Papers & Proceedings

Researchers typically invoke theoretical assumptions to estimate mark-ups. Instead, we directly obtain mark-ups by surveying Pakistani soccer-ball producers.

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What happens before? A field experiment exploring how pay and representation differentially shape bias on the pathway into organizations

Authors
Katherine Milkman, Modupe Akinola, and Dolly Chugh
Date
January 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Applied Psychology

Little is known about how discrimination manifests before individuals formally apply to organizations or how it varies within and between organizations. We address this knowledge gap through an audit study in academia of over 6,500 professors at top U.S. universities drawn from 89 disciplines and 259 institutions. In our experiment, professors were contacted by fictional prospective students seeking to discuss research opportunities prior to applying to a doctoral program.

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Incorporating neuroendocrine methods into intergroup relations research

Authors
Elizabeth Page-Gould and Modupe Akinola
Date
January 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Group Processes and Intergroup Relations

Intergroup researchers have the opportunity to access to a wide variety of methods to help deepen theoretical insights about intergroup relations. In this paper, we focus on neuroendocrine measures, as these physiological measures offer some advantages over traditional measures used in intergroup research, are noninvasive, and are relatively easy to incorporate into existing intergroup paradigms. We begin by discussing the major neuroendocrine systems in the body and their measurable biological products, emphasizing systems that have conceptual relevance to intergroup relations.

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