Faculty News

Prof. Paul Romer and Research Scholar Brandon Fuller's research on government services is cited

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "Weak government services are the main reason poor countries fail to catch up with rich ones, says Mr Romer. One response is for people in poorly run places to move to well governed ones. Better would be to bring efficient government services to them. In a recent paper with Brandon Fuller, also of NYU, Mr Romer argues that either response would bring more benefits than further lowering the barriers to trade in privately provided goods and services."
Student Club Events

22nd Annual Stern Women in Business (SWIB) Conference

Stern Women in Business (SWIB) will host their 22nd annual conference on Friday, February 7. This year's theme, "Reframing the Conversation: New Perspectives on Women in Business," will feature a keynote talk from Rosanne Haggerty, President of Common Solutions, as well as a keynote panel.
Research Center Events

Dstillery and NYU Stern Center for Business Analytics Host Second Annual ADS*CON Symposium

On February 6, Dstillery and NYU Stern's Center for Business Analytics (CBA) co-hosted Advertising and Data Science Congress (ADS*CON), a half-day symposium dedicated to exploring the impact of the data science revolution on the digital advertising ecosystem.
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Salomon on the Jos. A. Bank/Men's Wearhouse acquisition attempts

Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- “'This is a nothingburger,' says Robert Salomon, a management professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'A blip on the radar. It makes for interesting theater, but in the world of M&A this is barely an average-size deal.'”
School News

MBA students Michael Modisett, Alex Reicherter & Adam Teeter discuss win in Left Bank Bordeaux Cup

Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- "For the Stern team, the road to Bordeaux began last fall, when full-time MBA student Alex Reicherter hooked up with part-timers Adam Teeter and Michael Modisett. Shortly after the group formed, Dan Amatuzzi, a Stern alum and wine director at New York City market Eataly, reached out to offer his expertise."
Faculty News

Prof. JP Eggers on Bill Gates's new role at Microsoft

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Excerpt from Al Jazeera -- "Obviously this was not part of the plan when Mr. Gates stepped away at that point in time, but I think, given the struggles the company has had in terms of its strategy, in terms of its innovation and technology, there's a strong sense that he needs to become more involved. He is very clearly the public face to developers, to investors, to everyone of Microsoft and this is his legacy. This is his baby in many ways and I think he has a vested interest in seeing it succeed at this point."
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla on the recent growth in the stock market

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "'It's like a glimmer of sunshine, that one-year uptick,' said Richard Sylla, a financial historian at New York University. 'That's what you would expect to see in a growing, vibrant economy.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, NYU Global Research Prof. Ian Bremmer outlines concerns surrounding the Sochi Olympics

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Excerpt from TIME -- "If you’re a sponsor, a spectator, or Vladimir Putin himself, you better brace yourself for the Sochi Olympic Games. Between the security risks, violence in neighboring Ukraine, protests from the international community and the staggering price tag, Sochi has earned its status as the most geopolitically interesting Olympics since 1980 (incidentally, the last time the Games were held in Russia)."
Faculty News

Profs. Hal Hershfield's and Priya Raghubir's research on personal finance is cited

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "We already know that credit cards dull 'the pain of paying' compared to cash, according to a study from NYU’s Stern School of Business, so paying with someone else’s credit card is essentially pain free—and that’s why it’s so dangerous."
Faculty News

Prof. JP Eggers recommends next steps for Microsoft

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "[In] the enterprise space they've been much more successful and they have to continue to grow that and be successful there, but they're going to need something else on top of that, whether it's finding some way that they can translate the Office products relatively well into the mobile and tablet space, or something else entirely, they need something without a doubt."
Faculty News

Prof. Luke Williams's talk on innovation at Legal Tech is highlighted

Excerpt from Canadian Lawyer Magazine -- "A mercurial economy and the many ups and downs of the legal profession are changing the game but law firms, particularly Canadian ones, are not the most agile and responsive. But New York University Stern School of Business professor Luke Williams told an audience at Legal Tech today that this is the type of environment that forces disruptive innovation."
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter's book, "Drunk Tank Pink," is mentioned

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Excerpt from The Guardian -- "The key concept here, explored in depth by the psychologist Adam Alter, author of the book Drunk Tank Pink, is 'cognitive disfluency'. When information glides by too frictionlessly, we're liable to find it harder both to understand and to retain."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Jonathan Haidt explains why author Sam Harris is unlikely to change his views

Excerpt from This View of Life -- "What are the odds that anyone will change Harris’s mind with a reasoned essay of under 1000 words? I’ll put my money on Hume and issue my own challenge, The Righteous Mind challenge: If anyone can convince Harris to renounce his views, I’ll pay Harris the $10,000 that it would cost him to do so."
Faculty News

Prof. Foster Provost's and Prof. Prasanna Tambe's research on big data is featured

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Excerpt from Quartz -- "It turns out there is a kind of data that, like black holes or evil wizards of Middle Earth, only becomes more powerful the larger it grows. What’s more, suggest researchers Enric Junqué de Fortuny, David Martens and Foster Provost, even if you’re not gathering this kind of data at present, the new results suggest you may lose out to a competitor who is."
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Engle's research on volatility is highlighted

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Excerpt from MarketWatch -- "Research conducted by Robert Engle III, a finance professor at New York University who received the Nobel Prize in economics in 2003 for his work on market volatility, found that periods of high volatility tend to be clustered together."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Spence on the growth of emerging markets

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Professor Spence argues that we are in the midst of a 'century-long journey in the global economy. The end point is likely to be a world in which perhaps 75 per cent or more of the world’s people live in advanced countries.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on the sharing economy

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "In the typically materialistic, bling-obsessed U.S., for example, economists like New York University's Arun Sundararajan see the makings of a new wave of productivity gains as consumers lend and borrow cars, bicycles, homes, electronics, designer clothes, baby toys, golf clubs, you name it. Now, there are signs the phenomenon is reaching Asia."
Faculty News

Prof. Nathan Pettit on new research on personality and workplace success

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Managers hiring people to work in teams might learn from the research, said Nathan Pettit, an assistant professor at the Stern School of Business at New York University who studies social status in the workplace. While the study doesn’t address the quality of work actually performed, he said it does suggest that hiring decisions should take into account that neurotics might be more valuable, and extroverts less so, than they initially seem in interviews. 'We may be populating organizations with more extroverts than we should be,' he said."
School News

Debate Possible

Dean Peter Henry posed economic policy questions to former Treasury Secretaries Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers in an exclusive forum for MBA students in Stern’s Global Economy course.
Faculty News

Prof. Steven Blader on an NAACP suggestion to fast-track underrepresented workers

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "...Blader says, even if fast-tracking isn’t officially acknowledged, it’s a common practice, and so are the problems it can cause – no matter what demographic the fast-tracked worker is from. Imagine, says Blader, that you’re a worker watching your colleague get promoted quickly. 'I feel demotivated,' he says. 'I feel that no matter how hard I try, I may not benefit from all those efforts, because [the organization is] prioritizing things besides my efforts, and skills, and abilities. And as a result, I'm going to become more complacent, because I’m going to kind of start to feel like, "What’s the point?"'"
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on the strategy behind Amazon Prime

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "'You start buying everything through Amazon,' says Scott Galloway, professor of marketing at NYU's Stern School of Business. Galloway says Amazon has purposefully sacrificed short term profits to get more customers and more pricing muscle. 'It's going to have tremendous pricing power and, at a certain point, it will be able to flex that muscle and become a very profitable company.'"
Faculty News

Prof. JP Eggers on Microsoft's new CEO, Satya Nadella

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Normally, you would think that an insider would not be the person to change the company. You would expect that it would be kind of business as usual. But I think that given the fact that the company has been so much about the Office system and Windows that bringing up somebody who's got very little allegiance to those parts of the system gives them a real opportunity to know the business, but to be a real agent for change."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Nouriel Roubini outlines the challenges facing emerging markets

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "This mini perfect storm in emerging markets was soon transmitted, via international investors’ risk aversion, to advanced economies’ stock markets. But the immediate trigger for these pressures should not be confused with their deeper causes: Many emerging markets are in real trouble."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan's research on digital media and democracy is highlighted

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Excerpt from Science Magazine -- "Digital access was positively associated with civil liberties and media freedom. Mobile penetration had a greater impact on civil liberties than Internet access. Dynamic analyses revealed that greater access to mobile technology had an increased effect on civil liberties when a neighboring country (or a trade partner) scored high in civil liberties, suggesting that the diffusion of civil liberties is enhanced by digital access."