Faculty News

Prof. Pankaj Ghemawat discusses the findings of the DHL Global Connectedness Index, which he co-authored

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Perhaps [globalization] was never quite what people thought it was a few years ago, because I think a few years ago, the rhetoric was about whether distance was dead, the world was flat, et cetera, and now the rhetoric has shifted to, is globalization over? And what our study points out is both extremes are probably missing the mark. Globalization never was complete, but it did show an uptick last year."
Faculty News

Prof. George Smith's Global Perspectives on Enterprise Systems course is highlighted

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "In Global Perspectives on Enterprise Systems, an NYU elective led by Prof George Smith, our class examined Wedgwood’s life story and the lessons it offered. The course looks to answer some very important questions: why have Britain, the US, Germany and Japan been so prosperous over recent centuries? Why did these countries modernise their economies before their respective peers? Why did their reforms work and what lessons can we draw for other nations today?"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Pankaj Ghemawat discusses the findings of the DHL Global Connectedness Index, which he co-authored

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Excerpt from Strategy + Business -- "Forecasts aside, the results to date are unequivocal: The challenges of doing business abroad are daunting and will remain so. However, business leaders should not be too gloomy. Large untapped opportunities to create value across national borders still exist. In a world of semi-globalization, where markets are only partially integrated, smart strategies can still create big profits by scaling business across borders and arbitraging across international differences, especially when those efforts are coupled with appropriate adaptation to local and national contexts."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran's views on mergers and acquisitions are highlighted

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Excerpt from The New Yorker -- "The brute fact is that most mergers don’t work. Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at N.Y.U., has said, 'More value is destroyed by acquisitions than by any other single action taken by companies.'"
Research Center Events

Prof. Pankaj Ghemawat Launches NYU Stern’s New Center for the Globalization of Education & Management, with Special Guest Arun Kumar of the US Department of Commerce

NYU Stern alumni, faculty, corporate partners and guests convened for the launch of the School’s new Center for the Globalization of Education & Management (CGEM), which Professor Pankaj Ghemawat, who joined Stern’s faculty full time this September, is leading.
Faculty News

Profs Holger Mueller and Thomas Philippon's research on family-owned businesses is cited

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "[Family businesses] also tend to have better labour relations, according to studies by Holger Mueller and Thomas Philippon of New York University’s Stern business school. This may be because workers are readier to believe promises that they will be rewarded for delivering in the long run, if such pledges are made by founding families rather than outsider bosses who may be gone in a few years."
Faculty News

Prof. Luke Williams offers advice to Shoppable, a universal checkout technology startup

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "My question is, what are you doing at the centralized account level above and beyond just listing all the stuff they've saved and they want to purchase? Are you helping them make better decisions? Are you adding value there?"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Nouriel Roubini argues that the United States is keeping the global economy afloat

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "So the question is whether and for how long the global economy can remain aloft on a single engine. Weakness in the rest of the world implies a stronger dollar, which will invariably weaken US growth. The deeper the slowdown in other countries and the higher the dollar rises, the less the US will be able to decouple from the funk everywhere else, even if domestic demand seems robust."
Faculty News

Prof. Aswath Damodaran's valuation of Amazon is featured

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Amazon.com Inc. would have to overcome a decade’s worth of falling profitability during the next 10 years to justify its share price, according to Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at New York University. ...'If the operating margin stays at 7.5 percent or lower, you cannot get above the current stock price' in calculating Amazon’s value in a decade, Damodaran wrote on his Musings on Markets blog."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Michael Spence discusses new research showing that battling climate change can help the economy

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "Scientific evidence has eliminated legitimate doubts about the scale of the risks that climate change poses. Now, the Global Commission’s analysis has largely refuted the economic arguments for inaction. Add to that growing public concern about climate change, and the conditions for decisive action may have arrived."
Student Club Events

Diversity Case Competition Hosted by AHBBS in Association with GFA, MCA, OutClass, SIMR and SWIB

On October 31, AHBBS hosted NYU Stern's first Diversity Case Competition, in association with MCA, GFA, OutClass, SWIB and SIMR.
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Arun Sundararajan argues that sharing economy platforms and governments should share regulatory responsibilities

Excerpt from Policy Network -- "Governments need to understand and embrace this ongoing transition rather than impeding it, realizing that society’s interests are best served if they wield regulatory power to proactively partner with or delegate responsibility to the platforms. In tandem, forward-looking platforms should embrace their new responsibilities, rather than resisting them: participating in the provision of the social safety net is smart capitalism in the long run."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt's research on the lack of political diversity in social psychology is featured

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Excerpt from The New Yorker -- "The topics that social psychologists chose to study and how they chose to study them, he argued, suffered from homogeneity. The effect was limited, Haidt was quick to point out, to areas that concerned political ideology and politicized notions, like race, gender, stereotyping, and power and inequality. 'It’s not like the whole field is undercut, but when it comes to research on controversial topics, the effect is most pronounced,' he later told me. (Haidt has now put his remarks in more formal terms, complete with data, in a paper forthcoming this winter in Behavioral and Brain Sciences.)"
Faculty News

Prof. Viral Acharya's research on stress tests is cited

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "On October 27, Professors Viral Acharya and Sascha Steffen published an alternative estimate, using a different methodology, for 39 publicly listed eurozone banks with a combined balance sheet of €12.5tn (a subset of the banks in the EBA stress test and the ECB’s AQR). They calculated a shortfall of €450bn at the end of 2013 – about 3.6 per cent of assets."
Faculty News

Prof. Kim Schoenholtz on the Fed's decision to end QE

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Kim Schoenholtz, an economics professor at New York University, said the Fed’s bond purchases were particularly effective and important in stabilizing the financial system and stimulating the broader economy in the immediate aftermath of the financial crisis. But he said that the impact of the purchases had diminished as conditions improved, and that it now made sense to end the program. 'I applaud the Fed’s willingness to be aggressive, especially early on in the crisis, and it has made sense for the Fed to run a very accommodative policy,' Mr. Schoenholtz said. 'But we should not be surprised that monetary policy has diminishing returns.'"
School News

In an op-ed, Assistant to Leadership Development Hannah Crane highlights Stern's Mindfulness in Business Initiative

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "The many benefits of mindfulness, namely meditation, are staggering. Studies show that maintaining a mindful practice like meditation can reduce stress, extend life, boost your academic abilities, and even increase your overall happiness. Mindfulness can even make you a better leader. Not surprisingly many companies like General Mills and schools like the NYU Stern School of Business have developed initiatives to cultivate and promote mindful wellbeing, scholarship, and leadership among employees and students."
Faculty News

Profs John Asker and Alexander Ljungqvist's research on private and public company investments is cited

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "It’s brilliant work by economists from the Stern School of Business and Harvard Business School, Alexander Ljungqvist, Joan Farre-Mensa, and John Asker, in an article entitled 'Corporate Investment and Stock Market Listing: A Puzzle?' which compares the investment patterns of public companies and privately held firms. It turns out that the lag in investment is a phenomenon of the public companies more than the privately held firms."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Research Scholar Sarah Labowitz calls for open data from Bangladesh factories to improve worker safety

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Excerpt from The Daily Star -- "Knowing how the apparel supply chain really operates is the first step toward fixing it. And while this information on its own will not make factories safer, more transparency is a necessary predicate to developing the kind of comprehensive action plan that is urgently needed in Bangladesh."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini discusses the end of quantitative easing

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think that what's going to happen is, you end QE and then the question is when do you start lifting rates, and that could be pushed further in the future depending on the data. ... essentially, policy action depends on growth, unemployment, inflation and also global headwinds. And the dollar."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt's research on liberal bias in academia is featured

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Excerpt from The Washington Post -- "When the facts conflict with...sacred values, almost everyone finds a way to stick with their values and reject the evidence. On the left, including the academic left, the most sacred issues involve race and gender. So that's where you find the most direct and I'd say flagrant denial of evidence. I think the results of this study do clearly show that political concerns influence the willingness of sociologists to consider a major class of causal factors in human behavior."
Faculty News

Prof. Thomaï Serdari discusses the high-end handbag market

Excerpt from The Baffler -- "Serdari suggests that it is actually the increasing popularity of lower- and mid-level bags that now drives up the cost of higher-level bags. And there’s still a market for them, even at a 150 percent mark-up. Serdari says that, just as existing brands are hiking up their costs to distinguish themselves from the rest, a newly reinvented fashion brand (like Céline) might today choose to produce bags with the most marked increase (at, say, $2,500—up from $1,000 ten years ago)."
Faculty News

Senior Research Scholar Shlomo Angel discusses the Urbanization Project's research on the growth of 120 cities

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Excerpt from Fast Co.Exist -- "'What we've been able to show is that there's been unbelievable expansion,' says Shlomo 'Solly' Angel, a senior researcher at the NYU Stern Urbanization Project. 'This gives planners and policymakers an idea of by how much cities are going to grow. In sub-Saharan Africa, for example, cities are going to grow seven or eight times between now and 2040.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Joseph Foudy discusses China's economic growth

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Excerpt from CNC World -- "I think we should expect China to grow at a six or seven percent for the next five to ten years or so, and I think that's a new normal. When you grow for ten percent a year for three decades, it's only natural that you'll slow down. It's important to realize that the slowdown is a sign of success not weakness. Every successful economy, as it gets wealthier, transitions from ten percent growth to seven percent growth for a decade or two, to five percent growth and then eventually you are wealthy and you grow at a two to three percent that we see amongst all fully-developed countries."
Research Center Events

Inauguration of NYU Shanghai-Pudong Forum on Economics, Business, and Finance

On October 27, 2014, Peter Blair Henry, Dean of New York University’s Leonard N. Stern School of Business gave the inaugural address, an enlightening and thought-provoking discussion on his book Turnaround: Third World Lessons for First World Growth, at opening of the Shanghai-Pudong Forum on Economics, Business, and Finance.