Faculty News

Prof. Michelle Lederman's book, "The 11 Laws of Likability," is referenced

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Excerpt from USA Today -- "In her book, The 11 Laws of Likability, Lederman outlines some ways to bolster your self-image and help you project an authentic image that will attract others and help lead you to the success you desire."
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Seamans on a new mail service, The Village Doorman

Excerpt from Washington Square News -- "If the idea takes off, it will be pretty easy for competitors to replicate the business model. In fact, Amazon has been thinking about a similar idea using 7-11 stores."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on the health club industry's bifurcation trend

Excerpt from SYS-CON -- "Watch the interview below with Scott Galloway, a thought leader in consumer trends and digital innovation (he's with L2 Think Tank), as he explains the implications of bifurcation."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini predicts a hard landing for China's economy

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "New York University economist Nouriel Roubini said at a forum in Shanghai on July 26 that chances of a 'hard landing' in China will increase after 2013 as the nation grapples with a rising debt burden."
Faculty News

Prof. Amity Shlaes's book, "The Forgotten Man," is cited

Excerpt from American Thinker -- "Yet it is generally recognized today that by pursuing these policies FDR prolonged the Great Depression by another 5-7 years. (See Amity Shlaes: 'The Forgotten Man.')"
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini will speak at the Discovery Holdings Ltd. Leadership Summit

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Nouriel Roubini, co-founder and chairman of Roubini Global Economics LLC, and Absa Group Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Maria Ramos are due to speak at a leadership summit hosted by Discovery Holdings Ltd."
School News

NYU Stern's undergraduate program is highlighted for its unique academic experience

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Excerpt from US News & World Report -- " ... most freshmen have at least a basic idea of what they want to study when they enroll in one of NYU's 10 undergraduate colleges, schools, or programs. Each of these, from the Leonard N. Stern School of Business to the Tisch School of the Arts, offers a unique academic experience."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini says Greece should exit the euro zone

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Nouriel Roubini of the Stern School, New York University, has argued in the Financial Times this week that Greece should both default and exit."  Additional coverage appeared in two CNBC pieces, The Wall Street Journal, BBC, Financial Post, Reuters blog, NPR, Business Spectator, Bloomberg, Bloomberg Businessweek and a TIME blog.
School News

NYU Stern is cited for its design by architect David Helpern

Excerpt from DNAinfo -- "Plans by architect David Helpern, who designed the SoHo Grand Hotel and NYU's Stern School of Business, call for four single-family townhouses of five stories each, Community Board 2 land use chair Sean Sweeney said."
Faculty News

Prof. Christina Fang on experts who make bold economic predictions

Excerpt from The Moderate Voice -- "In the Wall Street Journal survey, if you look at the extreme outcomes, either extremely bad outcomes or extremely good outcomes, you see that those people who correctly predicted either extremely good or extremely bad outcomes, they’re likely to have overall lower level of accuracy."
Faculty News

Prof. Panos Ipeirotis's research on online user reviews is featured

Excerpt from MIT Technology Review -- "Another important discovery Ipeirotis made is that there is a significant disparity between what people talk about in reviews and what actually moves product."
Faculty News

Member of the NYU Stern Executive Board and Prof. Richard Bernstein (MBA '87) is quoted

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "I think the politics are such that the Fed is basically hog tied. 'Operation Twist' is not new stimulus. It's carrying on. What the Fed is trying to do is flatten the curve so they bring longer term rates down."  Additional coverage appeared in Business Day.
Faculty News

Prof. Paul Romer on the benefits of crises

Excerpt from Rapid City Journal -- "'A crisis is a terrible thing to waste,' according to the famous quote by Stanford economist Paul Romer, pointing out that in a contentious democracy such as ours, competing interests suspend their differences only when they have to confront a common threat." Additional coverage appeared on DAWN.com and Business Insider.
Faculty News

Prof. Paul Romer's research on accounting fraud is referenced

Excerpt from Globalresearch.ca -- " ... the title of Akerlof and Romer’s article says it all, 'Looting: The Economic Underworld of Bankruptcy for Profit.' The firm fails but the executives walk away rich."
Faculty News

Prof. Amity Shlaes on the HPV vaccine debate

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Republicans can't stop talking about the vaccine for human papilloma virus. Governor Rick Perry of Texas, a presidential candidate, is under fire for having issued an executive order in 2007 that allowed his health commissioner to mandate inoculation against the virus for girls entering sixth grade."  Additional coverage appeared in Kaiser Health News, Cincinnati.com and Bloomberg.
Faculty News

Prof. Marti Subrahmanyam on retiring from the Infosys Board

Excerpt from The Press Trust of India Limited -- "As I look back over the past 13 years as a member of the Infosys board, I feel a great sense of satisfaction. During this period, the company's revenues, profits and employee strength has grown one hundred times."
School News

MBA student Noah Schmutter on studying ethics at NYU Stern

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Excerpt from US News & World Report -- "Bluffing and deception are not considered immoral in a poker game, but they are in the real world. The business world is much like a poker game."  Additional coverage appeared on Yahoo! News.
Faculty News

Prof. Vicki Morwitz's research finds high status consumers are influenced by those with lower status

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Excerpt from Metro New York -- “We try to find out things about ourselves by comparing to the other. Downward comparisons proved to be surprisingly powerful.”  Additional coverage appeared in Metro London, Daily Mail and Times of London.
Faculty News

Prof. Anindya Ghose's analysis of the economic impact of user-generated online reviews is featured

Excerpt from Information Technology Newsweekly -- "This paper is the first study that integrates econometric, text mining, and predictive modeling techniques toward a more complete analysis of the information captured by user-generated online reviews in order to estimate their helpfulness and economic impact."
Faculty News

A paper by Prof. Nouriel Roubini on financial crisis policy response is featured

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Excerpt from a Reuters blog -- "Last week, Nouriel Roubini released a paper, 'A Radical Policy Response to the Rising Risks of a Depression and Financial Crisis.'"  Additional coverage appeared in Reuters, CNBC, Livemint, Economic Times and Mining Weekly.
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Nouriel Roubini says Greece should abandon the euro

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from the Financial Times A-List series -- "Greece must now begin an orderly default, voluntarily exit the eurozone and return to the drachma."  Additional coverage appeared on MSNBC, CNBC, Reuters, The Wall Street Journal, Wall Street Journal blog, Financial Times and Reuters.
Faculty News

Profs Kelly See and Elizabeth Morrison's research explains why execs are less likely to take advice

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "The authors found that the more power the employees had, the less likely they were to take coworkers' advice."  Additional coverage appeared in Washington Square News, ABC News and Fox News.
Faculty News

Prof. Larry Zicklin is cited for his help with the Baruch Index of Corporate Political Disclosure

Excerpt from Baruch College The Ticker -- "The launch of the Baruch Index was also made possible with the help of : Responsive Politics' federal corporate finance data, the National Institute on Money in States Politics' state corporate finance data, Louis Lipani, Vinny Wong, and Lawrence Zicklin."
Faculty News

Nobel Laureate Prof. Michael Spence says globalization is changing the western jobs landscape

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "As Michael Spence noted in a recent article in Foreign Affairs, globalization is forever changing the jobs picture in the United States and other wealthy countries."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on the star power of tech CEOs

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "'Web 2.0 CEOs are the new Julia Roberts of the world,' Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at NYU’s Stern School of Business, tells Ki Mae Heussner."  Additional coverage appeared in AdWeek.