Fractured Lines: How Political Polarization Affects Business Regulations
CBS Professor Lori Yue examines how urban-rural polarization impacts businesses’ risks and opportunities.
CBS Professor Lori Yue examines how urban-rural polarization impacts businesses’ risks and opportunities.
Columbia Business School Professor Makes the Case That Decarbonization Could Save Providers and Consumers Money
NEW YORK, NY – On Earth Day, the world’s largest secular observance, over a billion people will come together to celebrate the achievements of the environmental movement and to push for changes in human behavior and government policy. Columbia Business School’s faculty experts, who are at the forefront of environmental, climate, and geoengineering issues, are conducting groundbreaking research that sheds light on the climate’s impact on crops, ESGs, climate pledges, and more.
Columbia Business School Study Reveals that Giving Products a Human Characteristic Makes Consumers More Likely to Recycle Them
Columbia Business School Professor Abby Joseph Cohen recently joined former Dean Glenn Hubbard to discuss the forces that could shape the economy and markets in the year ahead.
Patrick Bolton is the David Zalaznick Professor of Business. He joined Columbia Business School in July 2005. He received his PhD from the London School of Economics in 1986 and holds a BA in economics from the University of Cambridge and a BA in political science from the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris. He began his career as an assistant professor at the University of California at Berkeley and then moved to Harvard University, joining their economics department from 1987-1989. He was Chargé de Recherche at the C.N.R.S.
* It's pronounced like "juggernaut" without the "jug."
Gernot Wagner is a climate economist at Columbia Business School. His research, writing, and teaching focus on climate risks and climate policy.
Kent Daniel is the Jean-Marie Eveillard/First Eagle Investment Management Professor of Business in the Finance Division at the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University. From 1996 to 2006, Kent was at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, where he was the John and Helen Kellogg Distinguished Professor of Finance (on leave from 2004-2006). Previously, he served on the faculties of the University of Chicago and the University of British Columbia.