Latest on Organizations & Markets
Organizations & Markets Faculty
CBS Faculty Research on Organizations & Markets
International Diversification Revisited
Using country index returns from 8 developed countries and 8 emerging market countries, we re-explore the benefits to international diversification over the past 30 years. To examine various theories in a comparable way, we intentionally limited ourselves to an examination of country index returns and a limited number of types of investments.
Values as the essence of culture: Foundation or fallacy?
- Authors
- Date
- January 1, 2014
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Recent findings of low societal consensus in cultural values suggest that our field’s dominant paradigm — culture as shared values — is a fallacy. The perennial persistence of this illusion may come from the fact that it appeals to the human brain’s hardwired capacity for essentialism. Evidence against value consensus, however, does not doom all shared-meaning models of culture (pace Schwartz, 2013).
Private Information Spillover and Its Effect on Public Disclosure: An Analysis of Headquarter Clusters, Proprietary Costs and Confidential Treatment Orders
Media Entertainment as Development Strategy
- Authors
- Date
- December 28, 2013
- Format
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Chapter
- Book
- Broadband as a Video Platform: Strategies for Africa
Rarely need one justify a topic as much as online entertainment for Africa. There is a lot of headshaking and muttering that it is not really important for Africans to watch TV shows on the Internet and that in any event their basic networks are too far behind to make this a realistic issue.
Moral Hazard and Debt Maturity
We present a model of the maturity of a bank's uninsured debt. The bank borrows funds and chooses afterwards the riskiness of its assets. This moral hazard problem leads to an excessive level of risk. Short-term debt may have a disciplining effect on the bank's risk-shifting incentives, but it may lead to inefficient liquidation. We characterize the conditions under which short-term and long-term debt are feasible, and show circumstances under which only short-term debt is feasible and under which short-term debt dominates long-term debt when both are feasible.
The Economics of Hedge Funds
- Authors
- Date
- November 1, 2013
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Financial Economics
Hedge fund managers trade o the benefits of leveraging on the alpha-generating strategy against the costs of inefficient fund liquidation. In contrast to the standard risk-seeking intuition, even with a constant-return-to-scale alpha-generating strategy, a risk-neutral manager becomes endogenously risk-averse and decreases leverage following poor performance to increase the fund's survival likelihood. Our calibration suggests that management fees are the majority of the total compensation.
The Economic and Policy Consequences of Catastrophes
- Authors
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Robert Pindyck and Neng Wang
- Date
- November 1, 2013
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- American Economic Journal: Economic Policy
How likely is a catastrophic event that would substantially reduce the capital stock, GDP, and wealth? How much should society be willing to pay to reduce the probability or impact of a catastrophe? We answer these questions and provide a framework for policy analysis using a general equilibrium model of production, capital accumulation, and household preferences.
Information Spillovers from Protests Against Corporations: A Tale of Walmart and Target
- Authors
- Date
- October 21, 2013
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Administrative Science Quarterly
In this study of the impact of protests against Walmart (a first entrant) on Target (a second entrant) from 1998 to 2008 in U.S. geographic markets, we develop and test a theory of information spillovers from protests against corporations proposing to enter a new market. We argue that the number of protests directed against a first entrant is a noisy signal for the second entrant because such protests are likely to be dominated by protest-prone activists and so do not reflect the sentiments of the community.