Faculty News

Prof. Andrea Bonezzi's research on retail therapy is highlighted

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Excerpt from Chicago Tribune -- "Buying stuff to make ourselves feel better after a failure is not only expensive but could backfire and lead us to think more about our shortcomings, according to the study, 'Perils of Compensatory Consumption,' by Rucker, the Northwestern professor, Monika Lisjak of Erasmus University, Andrea Bonezzi of New York University and Soo Kim of Cornell University. Just as bad, retail therapy can strip consumers of mental resources and impair their self-control, the study says. And less self-control has been shown to potentially lead to excessive spending."
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway explains how TurboTax can fix its reputation after a price-increase controversy

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "When a company messes up, three things need to happen, Galloway says. 'The first is to acknowledge the issue, to basically admit that you made a mistake,' he says. 'The second is to have the top guy or gal make that admission – so to get the CEO front and center. And the third is to overcorrect. To offer consumers a better deal than they originally had. Those are the only three things you need to remember, and they are consistently ignored.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Dean Peter Henry argues that capitalism creates jobs

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Excerpt from OZY -- "What no one is saying is this: We need more jobs — and capitalism creates them. If we continue on this trend of bashing capital and open markets, our labor markets don’t stand a chance."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Nouriel Roubini discusses the effectiveness of unconventional monetary policies

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "Simply put, we live in a world in which there is too much supply and too little demand. The result is persistent disinflationary, if not deflationary, pressure, despite aggressive monetary easing. The inability of unconventional monetary policies to prevent outright deflation partly reflects the fact that such policies seek to weaken the currency, thereby improving net exports and increasing inflation. This, however, is a zero-sum game that merely exports deflation and recession to other economies."
School News

NYU Shanghai Associate Vice Chancellor Eitan Zemel is interviewed about international business education in China

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "But there is also a real sense that China’s generous welcome to these institutions is part of its own need to modernise its higher education system, says NYU’s Prof Zemel. 'I think China is now struggling with the next phase of economic development. They have done a good job but they know that low-cost is running its course,' he says. The next phase is to invest in innovation and this means changing the way students are educated more widely. 'The objective of NYU in Shanghai is not to educate the 2000 [enrolled] students,' says Prof Zemel, 'but to have a long-term impact on other institutions.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Joseph Foudy on middle class income and buying power in New York

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Excerpt from New York Post -- "'The stagnation in wages is such a broader challenge for society than anything a minimum change in the minimum wage can ever address,' [Foudy] said. 'The only gift New Yorkers have gotten in the last couple of months is lower gas prices.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Baruch Lev on CEO presence on quarterly earnings calls

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Excerpt from Bloomberg View -- "At most companies it is the chief executive officer on the line fielding questions, accompanied by the chief financial officer and sometimes other top managers. This is one of the only managerial tasks, New York University accounting professor Baruch Lev observed a few years ago, that almost never gets delegated."
School News

Assistant Dean Isser Gallogly discusses Stern's new Langone part-time MBA two-year accelerated option

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Excerpt from TopMBA -- "Gallogly says the program will likely be of interest to applicants, 'who really are very driven, very motivated, and very structured and who have the time right now.' He notes that students in the accelerated program who have a life change – a new job or the birth of a child, for example – can opt to slow down and complete the program in up to six years."

Faculty News

Prof. Hans Taparia on the appeal of "fast casual" restaurants such as Chipotle and Shake Shack

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Excerpt from BBC News -- "'When you look at fast casual as a category, it tends to offer the promise of fresher food that's prepared more on-site, that is sourced more sustainably,' says Hans Taparia, a professor at New York University's Stern School of Business. This model is particularly appealing to millennials, he adds, who tend to care less about price - the average 'fast-casual' meal is $7.50, compared to $5 for a meal at a chain like Wendy's - than about ethics. 'Every marketer is trying to get access to this millennial consumer - it's an 80-million person strong consumer base, the largest demographic alive today,' says Prof Taparia."
Faculty News

Prof. Vishal Singh's research on link between political views and purchasing behaviors is cited

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Excerpt from Paste Magazine -- "Led by Vishal Singh of New York University’s Stern School of Business, the project examined consumer tastes across 416 counties in the United States, measuring 26 product categories ranging from frozen pizza preference to toothpaste. Over six years, Singh and his associates analyzed data and came find that a consumer’s political subconscious affects brands and items."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan discusses the regulatory challenges of the sharing economy

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Excerpt from TIME -- "'One hundred years ago there wasn’t a clear line between someone who ran a hotel and someone who let people stay in their homes. It was much more fluid,' says Arun Sundararajan, a professor at New York University Stern School of Business who studies the sharing economy. 'Then we drew clear lines between people who did something for a living and people who did it casually not for money. Airbnb and Lyft are blurring these lines.'"
Faculty News

Prof. Viral Acharya on the European Central Bank's quantitative easing

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'A big part of this is just cleaning the bank balance sheets after the sovereign debt crisis,' said Viral V. Acharya, professor of finance at Stern School of Business at New York University. But Mr. Acharya said central bank bond buying was an inefficient way to fix eurozone banks. At the rate that the European Central Bank plans to buy bonds, he said, it will take months for banks to unload their holdings."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Ingo Walter discusses Cuba's economic future

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "Bottom line: Cuba may well become a rising star in the region and an attractive economic partner for the U.S. if things are managed well. In financial terms, Cuba will be a 'buy' when the time comes."
Faculty News

Prof. JP Eggers discusses Apple's focus on the iPhone

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Excerpt from Marketplace -- "Companies that generate most of their sales from one product can be risky, says J.P. Eggers, a professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business. But he thinks Apple’s narrow focus is a source of strength, because the company can work on innovating and improving a narrow range of products."
Faculty News

Prof. Anindya Ghose's research on Craigslist and the spread of HIV is featured

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "Drs Chan and Ghose looked at HIV rates in 33 states between 1999 and 2008, mostly in America's central regions (Craigslist's spread to populous cities along coastal regions was much faster, muddying the data there). The arrival of Craigslist, they found, was correlated with an average increase of 15.9% a year in the number of HIV infections compared with what would have been expected had it not been launched; the pair estimate that the listing website was associated with between 6,130 and 6,455 extra infections a year throughout the country."
Faculty News

Prof. Nicholas Economides is interviewed on Greece's Syriza party and its plans for the economy

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Excerpt from Fortune -- "If its creditor nations agreed to extend the maturities to 75 years, Greece could easily handle its current debt load. It might be enough for Syriza to withdraw its pledge to roll back previous reforms and to honor its debts in exchange for those longer maturities. 'I think they will make a u-turn,' says Economides. 'The money they need is so gigantic. They will not have a choice.'"
School News

Stern's Langone part-time MBA two-year accelerated option is highlighted; Assistant Dean Isser Gallogly is interviewed

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "'People want things to happen and happen quickly,' says Isser Gallogly, Stern’s assistant dean of MBA admissions. Today, Stern announced a new, two-year part-time MBA program. It’s essentially the same as the school’s regular part-time MBA program, but comes with a recommended schedule that maps out the required coursework, and spots for electives, over the two years."
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on Uber and the changing nature of employment

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'I do think we are defining a new category of work that isn’t full-time employment but is not running your own business either,' said Arun Sundararajan, a professor at New York University’s business school who has studied the rise of the so-called on-demand economy, and who is mainly optimistic about its prospects. ... 'We may end up with a future in which a fraction of the work force would do a portfolio of things to generate an income — you could be an Uber driver, an Instacart shopper, an Airbnb host and a Taskrabbit,' Dr. Sundararajan said."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt's research on liberal and conservative thinking is cited

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "In their 2014 paper, Talhelm and his co-authors hypothesize 'that liberals think more analytically because liberal culture is more individualistic, with looser social bonds, more emphasis on self-expression, and a priority on individual identities over group identities.' Conservatives, in this analysis, are more dedicated to their communities and to the idea of community than liberals."
 
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Johannes Stroebel discusses his research on the relationship between retail and housing prices

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Excerpt from Vox -- "Using barcode level price data from 2,400 US zip codes on a variety of products sold in grocery and drug stores, we estimate that when local house prices double, product prices will increase by 15 to 20 percent. That is, households living in locations with rapidly increasing real estate prices will also face rapidly increasing costs of goods purchased in local stores."
Faculty News

Prof. Nicholas Economides discusses the economic impact of Greece's election

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Excerpt from CNN -- "First of all, it's unrealistic to write off the [Greek] debt because if Greece receives an extra dollar, this dollar will have to be paid by the taxpayers of the other countries and I don't see any European leader who's going to impose on his taxpayers a gift that he is going to give to Greece. I also don't think that this is the main problem of Greece. Although the present government was elected saying that, the real problem of Greece is being able to deal with the conditions that have been imposed through austerity and not so much on the issue of debt... The most important thing is for Greece to grow and I'm afraid that the present government has, in general, an anti-business attitude which will not attract growth and will not reduce unemployment."
Faculty News

Prof. David Yermack discusses the future of bitcoin

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Excerpt from The Boston Globe -- "'There are some breakthroughs in technology that are going to endure whether bitcoin survives or not,' said David Yermack, a professor of finance at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Prof. Adam Alter's research on milestone birthdays is featured

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "Researchers said they worked with Ashley Madison, a dating website for people seeking extramarital affairs, to analyze data on more than 8 million men who had registered with the site. The study was one of six published together in the journal 'Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences' in 2014 that examined when people make big life changes. It found 950,000 men were ages 29, 39, 49 or 59, or '9-enders,' and their numbers on the dating site were 18% higher than what would be expected by chance, according to the researchers from New York University’s Stern School of Business and the Anderson School of Management at the University of California, Los Angeles."
Faculty News

Prof. Xavier Gabaix's research on financial desion-making is spotlighted

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Excerpt from Bloomberg View -- "'Analytic cognition function appears to decline dramatically over the life-cycle, starting at age 20,' economists Sumit Agarwal, John C. Driscoll, Xavier Gabaix, and David Laibson wrote in a 2009 paper on financial decision-making. On the other hand, they found, experience is valuable. Studying customer behavior in across several different credit markets, they found people making the best decisions at about age 53. After that, things start to go downhill."
Faculty News

Prof. Luke Williams dicusses Sling TV, a cable alternative

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "Sling TV, it's an opportunity to fill a void, so they're the first in, but it's low-hanging fruit. I mean, we've been waiting for this void to be filled forever. So somebody was going to do it. I think the thing that I'm missing here is they're still using an old concept from cable. They're still using a bundling concept... I think investors... should be looking for where the real innovation comes from when another provider, perhaps also Sling TV, starts to unbundle these things."