Faculty News

Research Scholar Sarah Labowitz illustrates the difficulty of holding multinational corporations accountable for their human-rights practices

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Excerpt from Foreign Policy -- "'We always knew that transnational accountability mechanisms don’t reach every single multinational corporation,' she said. 'But in the last 10 years, we [have seen] this explosion of companies where we have no leverage whatsoever.'"
Faculty News

Professor Michael Spence's work on economic growth is referenced

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "As Nobel laureate Michael Spence has argued, the internal growth of economies would never have reached today’s rates without the cross-border flows of resources, capital and technology."
Faculty News

Professor Roy Smith underscores the impact of technology on banking jobs

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Excerpt from Yahoo Finance -- "'The banks are under severe pressure from this digital intermediation, which could cause them to lose business to new competitors and cause assets to flow out of the banks into someplace not regulated,' says NYU’s Smith. 'For a long time these companies were just little pin pricks, but they can’t be ignored anymore.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Rosa Abrantes-Metz argues for the reform of financial market benchmarks

Financial Times logo
Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "Authorities need to face the reality that direct evidence will probably be harder to come by, and that proactive reform of deficient structures is needed, coupled with active market screening."
Press Releases

Advice to Recruiters: Alumni Connections Trump Compensation in the War for Talent

Jason Greenberg
In a new study, Professor Jason Greenberg of the NYU Stern School of Business and Professor Roberto Fernandez of MIT Sloan School of Management find that using the alumni connections of current employees to woo and win talent will yield better results than job offers extended through on-campus recruiting efforts, summer internships or other search channels.
Research Center Events

Executive Education Short Course: Global Political Risk and Its Impacts on Business

Ian Bremmer
NYU Stern Executive Education is pleased to offer one of the premier courses on global political risk and its impacts on business. Taught by Ian Bremmer, a preeminent thought leader on foreign policy and global political risk, and a team from the prestigious Eurasia Group, this course offers an executive-level assessment of the global risk environment and the basis for determining how politics influences a variety of economic concerns.
Faculty News

In a co-authored op-ed, Professor Jonathan Haidt argues that expanded definitions of bullying, trauma and prejudice contribute to a culture of censorship

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Excerpt from The Guardian -- "This polarised image of vulnerable victims needing protection from vilified perpetrators is hardly a promising basis for a mature and respectful exchange of views on campus. It shuts down free speech and the marketplace of ideas."
Faculty News

Professor Jason Greenberg's research finds alumni connections and potential for growth are key factors in attracting MBA talent

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "'The jobs coming through the alumni channel are perceived as having significantly better growth potential,' [Greenberg] says, linking this preoccupation with longterm cash flow to the net present value calculations that are a staple of MBA courses. 'They are willing to take less today for a job that has better prospects in the long run.'"
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini's comments on interest rates are highlighted

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'We are reaching the limits of what monetary policy can do and we have to have the use of fiscal policy,' Roubini said."
Faculty News

Professor Nathan Pettit's co-authored research on the impact of status in the workplace is featured

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Excerpt from PayScale.com -- "The results of this research indicate that when co-workers are at the same status level, they are less likely to support one another than when they have a little more distance between them. Perhaps this is because these employees feel competitive with one another, or they feel that it wouldn't be fair to them and their time to help someone who is in roughly the same place as they are. Similarly, when someone's status is very distant, they are less likely to help out as well. There is, however, a kind of sweet spot where co-workers are most likely to support one another and offer help – a moderate status distance."
Faculty News

Lord Mervyn King's book, "The End of Alchemy," is featured

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "In his new book, 'The End of Alchemy', Mervyn King argues that financial crises arise because people hold mistaken beliefs about an uncertain future. 'Crises don't come out of thin air,' he writes, 'but are the result of unavoidable mistakes made by people struggling to cope with unknowable futures.'"
Faculty News

Professor Roy Smith comments on current antitrust regulations

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Excerpt from CBS News -- "'Many large corporations truly believe the administration's attitude on corporate mergers is anti-business and politically motivated,' said Roy Smith, a professor at New York University and a former Goldman Sachs partner, in an email. 'Those more left-leaning think government has to protect the people from greedy corporations, etc. There is no agreed answer to the question. But it seems to be true that the Obama people are more restrictive on M&A than the (Bill) Clinton people were.'"
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini discusses the impact of Federal Reserve policies on the Japanese yen

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I would say that part of the yen's strength, and is also the same thing with the euro, has to do with what's going on with the United States. The Fed has gone very dovish. They've now signaled that they're going to hike only, at best, twice a year. Even some Fed governors were talking down the dollar."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran discusses India's economic outlook

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Excerpt from The Economic Times -- "I think that increasingly countries are interconnected. If there is a correction in the US, you are going to see it ripple through the globe and you are going to see larger impacts in emerging markets and developed markets. So Indian markets are less about the Indian economy than they used to be, they are all connected to the global economy and that is why these negative interest rates in Europe and Japan are problematic because they are sending a signal about future growth that is not good for the global economy."
Faculty News

Professor David Yermack discusses the impact of blockchain technology on financial services

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Excerpt from the International Business Times -- "'In 10 years there may be no more stock exchanges and far fewer banks and so forth. All of these things can be made 90 percent cheaper by introducing this technology,' said David Yermack, chairman of the finance department and a professor at New York University Stern School of Business. 'Financial services are going to get a lot cheaper for most people.'"
Business and Policy Leader Events

Philip Krim, Co-founder & CEO of Casper, Joins MBAs for Langone Speaker Series

Philip Krim, co-founder and CEO of Casper, joined Professor Jeffrey Carr, MBA students and alumni for a 2015-2016 Langone Speaker Series event.
Research Center Events

NYU Stern Urbanization Project and UN-Habitat Show Cities Are Neglecting Public Space in New Developments

Henry Kaufman Management Center
On April 4 and 5, the NYU Stern Urbanization Project and UN-Habitat released the preliminary results of Monitoring Global Urban Expansion, a research program exploring the characteristics of the world’s 4,230 cities, at the Habitat III Thematic Meeting on Public Space in Barcelona, Spain. 
School News

Undergraduate student Joshua Sakhai (BS '18), co-founder of Ephemeral, Inc.'s "Coolest College Startup," is interviewed about the company

Inc. logo
Excerpt from Inc. -- "Based on our own research last summer during the NYU Launchpad Program, when we talked to hundreds of potential users--we even put up a lemonade stand in Washington Square Park--60% of those who didn't have tattoos wanted to get one but didn't. They are into fashion or think it's cool, or hip...people are hungry for ink and not getting it because of its permanence."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence Lenihan discusses the future of luxury retail at the French-American Chamber of Commerce Symposium

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Excerpt from Women's Wear Daily -- "'It will be the end of the billion-dollar brand. By trying to mean something to more people, the luxury brand [actually] means less to [everyone],' he concluded. That thought is predicated on the view that luxury is about having something that no one else has, even though that inherently also means fewer sales. 'Shifting from large megabrands to small specific brands will disrupt every facet of the fashion industry,' Lenihan concluded."
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt's comments on the "safe space" movement are highlighted

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "Attempts to shield students from words, ideas, and people that might cause them emotional discomfort are bad for the students. They are bad for the workplace, which will be mired in unending litigation if student expectations of safety are carried forward. And they are bad for American democracy, which is already paralyzed by worsening partisanship. When the ideas, values, and speech of the other side are seen not just as wrong but as willfully aggressive toward innocent victims, it is hard to imagine the kind of mutual respect, negotiation, and compromise that are needed to make politics a positive-sum game."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Salomon's book, "Global Vision," is featured

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "The challenge is to know what to look for when stepping outside your native market, be able to quantify the downside risk, and implement the required strategy in each of the new markets. In a new book, 'Global Vision,' by NYU Stern School of Business scholar and leader Robert Salomon, I finally found some great insights on what to look for, and how to make the necessary changes."
Faculty News

Lord Mervyn King discusses how to make banking safer, from his book, "The End of Alchemy"

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Excerpt from ABC.net -- "What I find odd about the present situation is that having controlled inflation and got away from the world in which we had 15%, 20% inflation, now people are getting paranoid about the fact that inflation is instead of being 2% is maybe only 1. Or horror of all horrors, it's 0. And this is a disaster in some sense. Now I find this utterly incompatible with the original intention of inflation targeting."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Whitelaw weighs in on China's new e-commerce tax

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Excerpt from China Radio International -- "It doesn't seem the taxes set up will make them prohibitively expensive. One thing that's important to keep in mind is that there tends to be much less sensitivity to price in the luxury goods market. So if you were talking the Louis Vuitton bag, or something like this, I don't think that a 10% or 17% value-added taxes is going to make a difference for the type of consumers who look to consume those luxury goods."
School News

Ephemeral, co-founded by Joshua Sakhai (BS '18) is named a 2016 "Coolest College Startup" by Inc.

Inc. logo
Excerpt from Inc. -- "Founded in 2014 by a team of New York University students, Ephemeral is developing a unique tattoo ink that gives consumers the option to safely, easily and effectively remove unwanted body art. The startup, which expects to have a finalized product within 12 to 18 months, was founded by Joshua Sakhai, 19; Seung Shin, 22; Anthony Lam, 22; Vandan Shah, 27; and Brennal Pierre, 34. It has already won other competitions, including an NYU Stern competition that earned it $75,000."