Paul A. Zarowin

Biography

Paul Zarowin is a Professor of Accounting at the Stern School of Business, New York University. Professor Zarowin earned his B.A. in History from the University of Pennsylvania in 1977, and his M.B.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1981 and 1985. He has won numerous research awards, including the New York University Presidential Fellowship, the Peat Marwick National Research Fellowship, and the Glucksman Institute Fellowship.

Professor Zarowin's research focuses on the relation between stock market prices and financial accounting data. He has studied how and why this relation varies over time and across firms, and how factors such as firms, regulators, and the economic environment affect the relation. Professor Zarowin's recent work deals with the extent to which stock prices reflect firms' future prospects, and how this is affected by firm's disclosures, accounting choices, and regulations.

Professor Zarowin has published articles in a wide range of journals, including the Journal of Accounting Research, theJournal of Accounting and Economics, The Accounting Review, the Review of Accounting Studies, The Journal of Finance, and the Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis. He teaches Financial Accounting and Financial Reporting and Analysis in the undergraduate and MBA programs at the Stern School.

Research Interests

Accounting sata and security privacy relations

Courses Taught

Financial Accounting - Intro, Intermediate, PhD.

Academic Background

Ph.D., Business Economics, 1985
University of Chicago

M.B.A., Finance, 1981
University of Chicago

B.A., History, 1977
University of Pennsylvania

Selected Publications

Cohen, D. and P. Zarowin (2010)
Accrual-based and real earnings management activities around seasoned equity offerings
Journal of Accounting and Economics, 50(1):2-19

Tucker, J. and P. Zarowin (2006)
Does Income Smoothing Improve Earnings Informativeness?
The Accounting Review, January, 251-270

Durnev, A., R. Morck, B. Yeung, and P. Zarowin (2003)
Does Greater Firm-specific Return Variation Mean More or Less Informed Stock Pricing?
Journal of Accounting Research, December, 797-836