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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

Accounting for Value

Authors
Stephen Penman
Date
December 1, 2010
Format
Book
Publisher
Columbia University Press

Accounting for Value teaches investors and analysts how to handle accounting in evaluating equity investments. The book's novel approach shows that valuation and accounting are much the same: valuation is actually a matter of accounting for value.

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Social Networks and Subjective Well-Being: The Effect of Regulatory Fit

Authors
Xi Zou, Paul Ingram, and E. Tory Higgins
Date
December 1, 2010
Format
Working Paper

What type of social network is associated with greater well-being? We argue that the effects of social networks on well-being depend on individuals' self-regulatory orientation — a basic motivational factor. We propose that brokerage networks fit a promotion-focused orientation that is concerned with eagerly pursuing gains, whereas closure networks fit a prevention-focused orientation that is concerned with vigilantly maintaining non-losses.

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Analysis and Valuation of Insurance Companies

Authors
Doron Nissim
Date
December 1, 2010
Format
Working Paper

During 2008 and 2009, the insurance industry experienced unprecedented volatility. The large swings in insurers' market valuations, and the significant role that financial reporting played in the uncertainty surrounding insurance companies during that period, highlight the importance of understanding insurers' financial information and its implications for the risk and value of insurance companies.

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Organizing the In-Between: The Population Dynamics of Network Weaving Organizations in the Global Interstate Network

Authors
Paul Ingram and Magnus Thor Torfason
Date
December 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Administrative Science Quarterly

This article examines the population dynamics and viability of network weavers, which are organizations that provide network relations for others. An analysis of the population dynamics of the intergovernmental organizations (IGOs) that are the basis of the interstate networks that influenced global economic relations, peace, and democracy in the 1815–2000 period show that IGO founding and failure depends on the ease and value of specific interstate relations.

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Stuck in the Middle: Impacts of Grade Configuration in Public Schools

Authors
Benjamin Lockwood and Jonah Rockoff
Date
December 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Public Economics

We examine the implications of separating students of different grade levels across schools for the purposes of educational production. Specifically, we find that moving students from elementary to middle school in 6th or 7th grade causes significant drops in academic achievement. These effects are large (about 0.15 standard deviations), present for both math and English, and persist through grade 8, the last year for which we have achievement data. The effects are similar for boys and girls, but stronger for students with low levels of initial achievement.

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Organizing for Synergies

Authors
Wouter Dessein, Luis Garicano, and Robert Gertner
Date
November 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Journal: Microeconomics

Large companies are usually organized into business units, yet some activities are almost always centralized in a company-wide functional unit. We first show that organizations endogenously create an incentive conflict between functional managers (who desire excessive standardization) and business-unit managers (who desire excessive local adaptation). We then study how the allocation of authority and tasks to functional and business-unit managers interacts with this endogenous incentive conflict.

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An upside to bicultural identity conflict: Resisting groupthink in cultural ingroups

Authors
Aurelia Mok and Michael Morris
Date
November 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Bicultural individuals differ in the degree to which their cultural identities are integrated versus conflicting—Bicultural Identity Integration (BII). Studies of judgment find that biculturals with less integrated identities (low BIIs) tend to defy salient cultural norms, whereas those with highly integrated identities (high BIIs) conform. This study examined biculturals' judgment in a group decision-making context, focusing on individuals' reactions to consensus in cultural ingroups. Results showed that low (vs.

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Creativity East and West: Perspectives and Parallels

Authors
Michael Morris and Angela Ka-yee Leung
Date
November 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management and Organization Review

This Editors' Forum –‘Creativity East and West’– presents five papers on the question of cultural differences in creativity from the perspective of different research literatures, followed by two integrative commentaries. The literatures represented include historiometric, laboratory, and organizational studies. Investigation of cultural influences through country comparisons and priming manipulations, focusing on how people perform creatively and how they assess creativity.

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Asian-Americans' creative styles in Asian and American situations: Assimilative and contrastive responses as a function of bicultural identity integration

Authors
Aurelia Mok and Michael Morris
Date
November 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management and Organization Review

Bicultural individuals vary in the degree to which their two cultural identities are integrated. Among Asian-Americans, for instance, some experience their Asian and American sides as compatible whereas others experience them as conflicting. Past research on judgments finds this individual difference affects the way bicultural individuals respond to situations that cue their cultures.

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