School News

Center for Business and Human Rights Deputy Director Paul Barrett shares his views on Facebook's creation of a Strategic Response team

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Excerpt from NBC News -- "Barrett said it was promising that Sandberg, Facebook's No. 2 executive, was paying attention and had set up a new team, but he said it was unrealistic for the team and to bear the world's problems, even with lots of outside advice. 'A large, international bank is not going to rely on local NGOs to help it run its global operations. It’s going to have people all around the world who are part of the organization,' Barrett said."
Press Releases

New Research Shows European Consumers Are More Likely to Buy from Brands that Support Refugees

Cover of How Helping Refugees Helps Brands: Europe report
New research from the NYU Stern School of Business and Tent Partnership for Refugees unveiled on World Refugee Day 2019 reveals that, despite increasing polarization in Europe around the refugee crisis, consumers in Italy, France, and Germany are more likely to buy from brands that support refugees.
Faculty News

Professor Anat Lechner offers insights on body and food-shaming in the workplace

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Excerpt from The Atlantic -- "'To feel real in a workplace and not just like a cog in a wheel, I think we have a need to connect when we can,' Lechner explains. 'We may not choose to talk about going through divorce or some big disease we have, so we revert to things that are real, but a little less intimate.'"
School News

In a pair of in-depth Q&As as part of P&Q’s “Best and Brightest”, Executive MBA students Bryan Kelly and Emily Yu reflect on their time at Stern and how the program has added value to their careers

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- Bryan: "'The executive MBA program at NYU Stern offered everything I was looking for in my business training. It is ranked as one of the top EMBA programs in the country, is located close to my place of work, and has a great and diverse curriculum that provides both strong foundational classes as well as a wide array of elective classes that offers numerous specialization areas. I was particularly interested in specialized classes in leadership and strategy. In addition, several classes in healthcare business and economics were particularly relevant to my career development.'"
School News

Stern's new healthcare MBA specialization and application deadlines are highlighted; recent MBA graduates Christopher Costello (MBA ‘19), Andrew Kwan (MBA ‘19) and Lia Winograd (MBA ‘19) share advice for prospective applicants

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "The healthcare sector represents about one fifth of the US economy, with New York City serving as a key epicenter with its numerous hospitals, pharmaceutical companies and laboratories. Unsurprisingly, all sectors of the healthcare space have demand for the kind of business acumen that NYU Stern is famous for cultivating."
School News

NYU Stern Announces 2019-2020 MBA Application Deadlines & Essays, New Healthcare MBA Specialization

Kaufman Management Center
Today, NYU Stern announced its 2019-2020 application deadlines and essays for its two-year Full-time MBA, Langone Part-time MBA, and two focused MBA programs (Andre Koo Technology and Entrepreneurship MBA and Fashion & Luxury MBA). Of note, Stern’s two required EQ Endorsements and the popular “Pick Six” visual personal expression essay both remain. Stern is also launching a new MBA specialization in Healthcare.
Faculty News

In a live interview, Professor Dolly Chugh shares the importance of being what she calls a "good-ish" person, from her book, "The Person You Mean to Be"

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Excerpt from TODAY -- "If we think of being a good person as being without blind spots, never making a mistake, we put ourselves in a very tight corner with no window. There's no room to grow there. And what we know from years and years of psychological research is we all have blind spots. There's things we don't notice in our own behavior. Let's give ourselves room to grow: what I call being 'good-ish.'"

 
Research Center Events

Executive Education Short Course: Negotiation Strategies: Optimizing Outcomes through Collaboration and Conflict Resolution

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This program is designed to improve existing negotiation skills in order to optimize outcomes, enhance collaboration and expand relationships.
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt is quoted in a feature story on the importance of incorporating ethics into business education

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "At New York University’s Stern School of Business, Jonathan Haidt, professor of ethical leadership, applies moral psychology to the way ethics is studied and integrated into the business curriculum. He says if students are taught how to integrate social and environmental considerations into decisions, ethics will follow. He argues against 'the shareholder primacy view' and encourages students to think in the long term. 'When you do that, ethics flows naturally,' he says."
School News

NYU and Stern are featured in a roundup of top historic universities offering graduate business programs

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Excerpt from CEOWorld Magazine -- "The densely urban campus is quite a delight for international students. The private research university here enrolls around 22,300 undergraduates every year. The Greenwich Village neighborhood here ensures that the students also get exposed to the local culture and rich heritage."
School News

Stern is highlighted in a feature on top b-schools for Executive Programs

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Excerpt from CEOWorld Magazine -- "Stern School of Business here is considered to be the most prestigious and honorable management schools in the world for multiple reasons. The pristine village campus of Greenwich is a delight to pursue management studies.... Programs: Degrees for Executives: MS in Business Analytics, MS in Risk Management, MS in Global Finance, TRIUM Global EMBA, and Executive MBA + Executive Education for organizations."
Faculty News

Professor Petra Moser's research on the impact of copyright law is cited

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Excerpt from NPR -- "Giorcelli and Moser estimate that, overall, Napoleon's introduction of copyright led to a 150 percent increase in the number of operas composed each year."
School News

Stern's Undergraduate College is highlighted for its top ranking in finance

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "In U.S. News’ 2019 business school ranking, Wharton ranked #1, followed by New York University’s Stern School of Business and MIT’s Sloan School of Management, which switched spots from the year before."
Faculty News

In a live interview, Professor Paul Romer shares his perspective on China's approach to trade negotiations with the US

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Excerpt from Bloomberg-- "I think what they've decided is the United States is not a reliable trading partner... I think they're on a trajectory now that they're not going to move off of -- of becoming wholly self-sufficient in tech."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan's analysis of Uber and Lyft's innovative business models is included

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Excerpt from The San Francisco Chronicle -- Uber and Lyft were “groundbreaking as the first systems where millions of people can set their own hours and earn money proportionate to the time they put in without it having to be continuous bunch of hours,” said Arun Sundararajan, a New York University business professor who studies gig companies. “Certain segments of the population, such as single parents, need that absolute flexibility.”
School News

Stern's Real Estate MBA specialization and the Center for Real Estate Finance Research are highlighted in a story on the best b-schools for a real estate MBA

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "NYU Stern’s Center for Real Estate Finance Research was established in 2012 to foster research in real estate finance, economics, and operations at Stern, and to improve and expand course offerings and career services in the MBA and undergraduate programs. Its mission also includes deepening the relationship between the Stern school and the real estate industry. The Stern School offers a real estate specialization to its full-time MBA students that 'Provides rigorous training in the development, investment, and financing of real estate projects.'"
School News

Professor Anthony Marciano and recent graduate Gabriel Ng (MBA/MPA '19) are quoted in a sustainable finance trend story, citing the new ESG fund in the Michael Price Student Investment Fund and value of experiential learning provided by the NYU Impact Inv

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- This spring, New York University’s Stern School of Business launched an ESG fund as part of the Michael Price Student Investment Fund family, which began investing in 2000. The six Stern M.B.A. students managing the fund choose companies using ESG scores from data providers and conducting their own independent analysis of the businesses.
Faculty News

Professor Kim Schoenholtz's joint research on improving US monetary policy communications is spotlighted

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Excerpt from the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung -- (translated from German using Google Translate) "Cecchetti and Schoenholtz make three suggestions in their conference paper. [Their] first suggestion should be self-evident, but it is not yet: Central bank statements should be written in understandable language. This includes making a dissent among the decision-makers clear without getting lost in endless statements. Although it may be difficult to surpass the volubility of the members of the Central Bank Council of the Deutsche Bundesbank in the 1980s and early 1990s, there is now an increase in public statements by monetary policymakers to an extent that does not promote the dissemination of a clear message. The independence of from central banks is an important achievement, but in troubled times it is not sacrosanct. It is therefore not bad for the leadership of a central bank to be perceived as a capable team, rather than and not as a chronically quarreling bunch. Secondly, Cecchetti and Schoenholtz recommend clear statements from monetary policymakers regarding how they would change course as economic perspectives change. This is a very demanding proposal that is more likely to come to academic economists than practical monetary policy makers. It is not only difficult for monetary policymakers to communicate clearly how they would, for example, respond to an intensification of international trade conflicts. An overly detailed scenario analysis could also give monetary policymakers an excuse to be too active in responding to changes in the environment."
Faculty News

Professor Kim Schoenholtz's joint research on improving US monetary policy communications is spotlighted

FAZ logo
Excerpt from Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung -- (translated from German using Google Translate) "Cecchetti and Schoenholtz make three suggestions in their conference paper. [Their] first suggestion should be self-evident, but it is not yet: Central bank statements should be written in understandable language. This includes making a dissent among the decision-makers clear without getting lost in endless statements. Although it may be difficult to surpass the volubility of the members of the Central Bank Council of the Deutsche Bundesbank in the 1980s and early 1990s, there is now an increase in public statements by monetary policymakers to an extent that does not promote the dissemination of a clear message. The independence of from central banks is an important achievement, but in troubled times it is not sacrosanct. It is therefore not bad for the leadership of a central bank to be perceived as a capable team, rather than and not as a chronically quarreling bunch.
Faculty News

Professor Joe Magee provides insight on the psychological effects of power

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "'The point is that power moves people in some predictable directions on average,' Joe Magee, a New York University psychologist who studies the psychological effects of power, told Business Insider in a phone interview. It's not so much a bias, he's careful to note, but a cognitive tendency or propensity."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway's thoughts on breaking up Google and Facebook are referenced

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Excerpt from Barron's -- "There could be reason to break up tech giants—it is just not antitrust-related. The antitrust debate aside, a spinoff approach might be a boon for investors. Scott Galloway, the serial entrepreneur and New York University marketing professor, says that Facebook could unlock value by spinning off its Instagram and WhatsApp units, while Google could do the same with YouTube."
Faculty News

Professor Joshua Ronen provides commentary regarding the culture of former accounting firm Arthur Andersen.

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Excerpt from Bloomberg Tax -- “Andersen’s culture had changed long before Enron,” Ronen said in a phone call. “There had been other scandals such as WorldCom, and the Andersen culture had changed to chasing revenue. I don’t think the name would be a positive today.”
Faculty News

Professor Allen Adamson comments on the factors that have led to a decline in the retail workforce

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Excerpt from Reuters -- “You don’t see many kids coming out of university saying ‘I want to go into retail,’ said Allen Adamson, an adjunct professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business.
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White remarks on President Trump's desire to revitalize employment in manufacturing

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Excerpt from Newsweek -- Mr. Trump for over two years has been huffing and puffing about reviving manufacturing employment. This is a pipe dream, Lawrence White, an economics professor at NYU's Stern School of Business, told Newsweek.

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