Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses the impact of minimum wage laws in a feature story on fair pay and the sharing economy

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Excerpt from Recode -- "'A lot of local governments are likely to be watching how the New York minimum wage experiment plays out,' said Arun Sundararajan, a professor of business at NYU who studies the gig economy. Sundararajan also cautioned that the 'devil is in the details' with rolling out these kinds of regulations."
Faculty News

In a live interview, Professor Edward Altman argues that India needs a good credit culture

Excerpt from CNBCTV18 -- "'If we have a recession, then there would be tremendous impact on defaults and the size of companies that default would be more than we thought because of the incredible build up in global debt in last nine years,' Altman said."
Faculty News

Professor Petra Moser's research on how patent laws influence innovation is featured in a video series on inspiring women in economics

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Excerpt from Marginal Revolution -- "She had no idea whether any of this data work would pay off, but it did pay off, with a now-famous paper in the AER. This is a good lesson for students... Greatness requires ingenuity and perseverance and Petra Moser exemplifies both of these characteristics."
School News

In a joint op-ed, MS in Risk Management alumni Sean Holland and James Laurie argue for public pension reform and greater transparency, based on their work with Professor Ingo Walter

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Excerpt from The Hill -- "This is a deep-rooted and complex financial predicament with potentially calamitous economic, social and political ramifications. For all stakeholders, the cure may be worse than the malady in that all potential solutions will involve some degree of prolonged financial sacrifice and suffering, especially for those least prepared."
Research Center Events

Economic Outlook Forum

NYU flags outside of the Henry Kaufman Management Center
The NYU Stern Center for Global Economy and Business will host the Economic Outlook Forum on February 6, 2019.
Faculty News

Professor Amal Shehata is interviewed for a story on KPMG's changes to its audit practices after a cheating scandal

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Excerpt from Bloomberg Law -- "'Any of these frauds or scandals end up damaging the trust in the audit role whether it’s KPMG or their competitors,' Shehata said. 'There ends up being this lingering blemish on the integrity of the audit, the feasibility of the audit—does it really work, is it possible to conduct an independent audit?'"
Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose explains how India's new foreign direct investment (FDI) regulations may derail Amazon's planned acquisition of Flipkart

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Excerpt from Quartz India -- "'The new regulations are semi-protectionist and will directly benefit local players such as (India’s richest person) Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Retail. Who all have been pulling the strings within the government to make this happen is anybody’s guess,' Anindya Ghose, the Heinz Riehl professor of business at New York University (NYU), told Quartz."
Faculty News

Professor Hila Lifshitz-Assaf's joint research on AI, crowdsourcing and innovation is featured

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Excerpt from ZDNet -- "The report describes a process for utilizing remote workers and AI in concert to identify analogies. The possible upshot is a machine learning toolkit that could accelerate innovation and lift us past what some describe as an innovation plateau."
Faculty News

Professor Sabrina Howell's joint research on private equity in higher education is referenced

Excerpt from the Epoch Times -- (translated from German using Google Translate) "Charlie Eaton, Sabrina Howell and Constantine Yannelis state: After the takeover by private equity investors, the profits of the college triples on average. Suppliers achieve this by increasing tuition, taking in more students, and reducing staffing. That this does not do the quality is obvious."
Faculty News

Professor Johannes Stroebel's joint research on discount rates in housing markets is included in a story on mitigating climate change

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Excerpt from Chicago Booth Review -- "Yale’s Stefano Giglio, Harvard’s Matteo Maggiori, and New York University’s Johannes Stroebel studied discount rates independently of climate change—by studying the housing markets in the United Kingdom and Singapore, where homes can be purchased outright or leased for contracts lasting 50 to 999 years—and conclude that over very long time periods (a century or more), the rates are extremely low, lower than implied by most economic theory."
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt's views on Facebook's impact on society are featured in a roundup of influencers' thoughts on the company's 15th anniversary

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Excerpt from Vox -- "There are empirical studies pointing to a causal connection to heavy social media use, and there are studies indicating no connection. I predict that a consensus will emerge by the end of 2019, and that it will be that heavy use of social media damages many young teenage girls, reducing their odds of success in life."
Faculty News

Research from Professor Adam Alter's book, "Irresistible" is referenced

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Excerpt from WWD -- "While research has not yet determined how technology affects your brain, Soren cited such studies as one by 'Irresistible' author Adam Alter that deduced 40 to 50 percent of young people would rather have a bone in their hand broken than have their phone broken."
Faculty News

Professor Thomas Philippon's research on the cost of financial services is cited

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "In Finance v Wal-Mart: Why are Financial Services so Expensive?, Mr. Philippon crunches the numbers on costs for consumers. The results aren’t pretty, with increased intermediation just one of the smoking guns. According to Mr. Philippon: 'The cost of intermediation per dollar of assets created has increased over the past 130 years.'"
Faculty News

Professor and Vice Dean of the Undergraduate College Robert Whitelaw's joint research on stock market returns is cited

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "Of course, tail risk isn’t just about bad things. There is also a slim chance of huge returns on some stocks. But we know that investors pay too much for this. New York University’s Robert Whitelaw has shown that US investors pay too much for lottery-type stocks."
Faculty News

Professor Baruch Lev explains the benefits of a subscription-based business model

Excerpt from InTheBlack-- "With a subscription model, you can accurately track who the customers are. You can see who the repeat customers are and what they like to purchase. This is an incredibly important management tool, Lev argues. 'If you look at the number of repeat customers, this is the best indicator of customer satisfaction. If repeat business is decreasing over several quarters, you know you’ve got a problem.'"
Faculty News

Professor Hila Lifshitz-Assaf is quoted in a story on Wattpad and data-driven storytelling in film and TV

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Excerpt from the Los Angeles Times -- "Hila Lifshitz-Assaf, a New York University assistant professor who specializes in technological innovation, says that crowdsourcing is part of an ongoing trend of the last decade. One advantage, she says, is democratizing creativity and eliminating social barriers to creative fields. 'It’s much less about connections and who you know,' Lifshitz-Assaf said."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Stern EMBA Speaker Series: Tom Monahan (MBA ‘95)

Tom Monahan
On February 1, 2019, NYU Stern's Executive MBA Program and NYU Washington DC hosted a Stern EMBA Speaker Series event at NYU’s downtown DC location featuring EMBA alumnus Tom Monahan (MBA ‘95), Founder & Managing Partner, Norton Street Capital.
School News

In a contributed article, Fashion & Luxury MBA student Denise Zhu shares highlights from her international immersion course in Milan

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Excerpt from Clear Admit -- "Prior to the trip, I didn’t necessarily think how similar the luxury car and clothing industries were to each other. We spent the morning at the Lamborghini Museum, where we saw how each car is produced. Watching the whole supply chain was truly an eye-opening experience; from seeing the seamstress hand stitch pieces of leather for the seats to watching the engineers assemble the engine, each Lamborghini station was filled with superb craftsmanship and precision."
Faculty News

Professor Edward Altman's Z-Score research is referenced

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Excerpt from INQUIRER.net -- "In 1968, a professor from New York University by the name of Edward Altman developed a handy financial model that can predict the likelihood of a company’s bankruptcy within two years. Known as the Altman Z-score, the model generates a number by taking the sum of five weighted financial ratios of a stock. The lower the resulting score, the larger the probability that the company will fail."
Faculty News

Professor Tom Meyvis is interviewed for a feature article on millennials and sleep-related products

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Excerpt from Broadly -- "'Sleep is nothing exceptional —we all do it and do it all the time—but anything that improves sleep can definitely have a massive impact on our lives,' Meyvis said in an email. 'In the past, this may have been a harder sell (as it's such a boring, mundane, non-special category), but the current focus on improving/luxurizing everyday life probably makes people more receptive to this.'"
Faculty News

Professors Matthew Richardson, Kim Schoenholtz and Lawrence White's joint research on the impact of the Dodd-Frank act and recent regulatory reforms is featured

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Exceprt from the Harvard Law blog -- "We conclude that implementation of Dodd-Frank has contributed significantly to the reduction of systemic risk in the United States. It is important to maintain that progress. At the same time, however, Dodd-Frank addressed these risks only incompletely and, in some cases, introduced burdensome rules that have little to do with systemic risk."
Faculty News

Professor Ari Ginsberg comments on a recent report by Yelp predicting a forthcoming economic slowdown

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Excerpt from Inc. -- "'[Yelp's average] is a new source of data and is a valuable source--but it has to be analyzed so you're not basically crowning it as the new source,' says Ari Ginsberg, a professor of entrepreneurship and management at New York University's Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Professor Marti Subrahmanyam's joint research on the impact of the European Central Bank's policies on bond markets is spotlighted

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Excerpt from Forbes-- "Just like the Federal Reserve did before it, the ECB engaged in a multi-trillion euro bond-buying program designed to lower the absolute level of interest rates in the countries of the eurozone, Europe's single currency area. Unfortunately, that program had the unintended consequence of messing up Europe's bond market so allowing private financiers to profit via riskless trades to the tune of hundreds of millions of euros, new research shows."
Faculty News

Professor Thomaï Serdari is quoted in a story on Dolce & Gabbana's controversial ads promoting its fashion show in China

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Excerpt from Le Temps -- (translated from French using Google Translate) "'It's always smarter to mock oneself than to make fun of others,' said Thomai Serdari, Luxury Marketing Specialist at New York University."