Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt's book, The Righteous Mind, is featured

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Excerpt from The Atlantic -- "In Jonathan Haidt’s book The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion, he explained that within the United States, members of the educated upper-middle class are outliers when it comes to their intuitions about morality, and that there is more to morality as many practice it than concerns about harm and fairness. Later, while sketching alternative foundations of moral concern, he writes about sanctity and degradation, and the human relationship to disgust."
Faculty News

Professor Paul Romer's work on macroeconomics is included in a list of writing that shaped economic thinking in 2016

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Excerpt from Bloomberg View -- "Many people have criticized macroeconomics over the years, especially since the financial crisis. But perhaps none have done so as forcefully as Paul Romer, the new chief economist of the World Bank. Romer takes his fellow macroeconomists to task for failing to reconcile their theories with reality, and accuses them of acting more like a religion than a science."
Faculty News

Professor Kim Schoenholtz discusses the Bank of Japan's monetary policy

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The Bank of Japan used to have a very poor policy arrangement. They did not aim at keeping prices stable. They encouraged the sustained deflation. But today's Bank of Japan is the most aggressive monetary policymaker on the planet. They've been doing more than virtually any other central bank to restore inflation expectations of about 2%. The problem for them is that it hasn't worked well."
Faculty News

Professor John Horton shares insights from oDesk's improvements to its software and efficiency

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Excerpt from MIT Sloan Management Review -- "'Once everyone was speaking the same language vis-à-vis skills,' says Horton, 'we could build a bunch of new features without having to do lots of machine learning to figure out what people were talking about. This kicked off a more general attempt in the company, named "Project Babel" to find important unstructured data and then structure it.'"
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla weighs in on Steven T. Mnuchin's appointment as Treasury Secretary

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'I think he would be controversial — former Treasury secretaries have been top bankers and businessmen or lawyers and they were well-recognized top leaders in their professions,' said Prof. Richard Sylla at the Stern School of Business of New York University, whose research focuses on financial history and economics. 'But Mnuchin wasn’t that famous as a Goldman Sachs guy, and probably not even as a hedge fund guy, so why is he there? Well, he took the job of raising money for Trump.'"
Faculty News

Professor Ari Ginsberg discusses how the renegotiation of the NAFTA trade deal could impact businesses

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Excerpt from Inc. -- "'Small businesses are disproportionately vulnerable to these events,' says Ari Ginsberg, professor of entrepreneurship and management at New York University's Stern School of Business. He notes that small businesses are plentiful, but that diversity can make corralling their economic might tough. 'Larger corporations have ways of muffling these events but small businesses don't.'"
Faculty News

Professor David Yermack discusses the uncertainties facing corporate leaders in the Trump era

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'I don’t think anyone has any idea what to expect,' said David Yermack, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'Companies have to make educated guesses about what may happen when, but there’s a huge amount of uncertainty.'"
School News

Vice Dean of MBA Programs Raghu Sundaram underscores the value of an MBA specialization for job seekers while highlighting Stern’s FinTech specialization

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Excerpt from US News & World Report -- "'Having a specialization will not get you the job, but it certainly will make it a lot easier to get the interview. It opens the door and that's the reason why students are so fond of specializations,' says Raghu Sundaram, vice dean of MBA programs at New York University's Stern School of Business."
Faculty News

Professor Paul Romer's research on macroeconomics is referenced

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "Mr Romer portrays modern macroeconomics as a racket held together by people who protect their influence. ... Mr Romer claims that the state of macroeconomics is worse. It has regressed. His observations are disturbing in their own right. But what makes them relevant in the context of this discussion is that our economic policy institutions are premised on the idea that these theories are correct. Our independent central bankers are macroeconomists, who were trained in those very models that Mr Romer criticises."
Faculty News

Professor Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh is featured for winning the 2015 Bernácer Prize and is interviewed about his research on the real estate industry and asset pricing

Excerpt from Expansión -- "[Van Nieuwerburgh's] studies about how the real estate market is capable of transmitting shocks to the rest of the economy and financial assets have won him many accolades. Now, the reputed academic focuses his efforts on the proposal of the creation of a risk-free European asset which, in his view, would allow Europe to prevent crises."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway discusses Verizon's options in connection with its planned acquisition of Yahoo in light of a second hack

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think the most likely one is they extract their pound of flesh and they reduce the price. The other option is to walk from the deal. I think the stock would pop and it would show some discipline on behalf of Verizon management if they walked right now. The other thing is to try and create some sort of legal entity where they would put AOL and Yahoo into that distinct entity to try and, if you will, create a firewall around what might be an unbelievable amount of liability."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan explains Uber’s launch of self-driving cars without permits in California

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Excerpt from The Guardian -- "Experts note that Uber has an obvious financial interest in a system with minimal regulations. By ignoring California regulators, the corporation is attempting to preemptively create a framework in which self-driving cars are treated similarly to traditional vehicles, said Arun Sundararajan, a New York University business professor and expert on the sharing economy. 'The act of asking for permission is sort of a tacit admission that this needs to be regulated,' he said. 'They are playing a long game here … They’re trying to define what the regulatory space is going to look like.'"
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan is featured in a New York Times op-ed about the terminology used to describe the sharing economy

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Arun Sundararajan, author of the new book 'The Sharing Economy: The End of Employment and the Rise of Crowd-Based Capitalism,' said he chose that term for his title because so many people use it. Yet Mr. Sundararajan, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, actually prefers 'crowd-based capitalism,' because a crowd of consumers obtains services by connecting, via a platform, with a crowd of suppliers."
Faculty News

In an in-depth interview, Professor Robert Salomon discusses the challenges facing emerging markets

Excerpt from Mundo Empresarial -- "...in their effort to conquer distant lands, companies from developed countries often run into more problems than profits. Awakening to this reality, we are now beginning to observe an exodus from emerging markets."
Faculty News

Professors Jonathan Haidt and Elizabeth Morrison share insights on fostering an ethical environment in business

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Excerpt from the Harvard Business Review -- "Jonathan Haidt, Professor of Business Ethics at NYU and founder of Ethical Systems, says, 'It’s important to talk about the positive examples of ethical behavior, not just the bad ones. Focusing on the positive reasons you are in business, and reinforcing the good things people do strengthens ethical choices as ‘the norm’ of the organization.' ... Elizabeth Morrison of New York University, in Encouraging a Speak Up Culture, says 'You have to confront the two fundamental challenges preventing employees from speaking up. The first is the natural feeling of futility — feeling like speaking up isn’t worth the effort or that no one wants to hear it. The second is the natural fear that speaking up will lead to retribution or harsh reactions.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Research Scholar Robert Frank outlines the obstacles to repealing and replacing Obamacare

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Opponents of the Affordable Care Act have denounced it bitterly for more than six years, so it is not surprising that, despite the program’s successes, public opinion about it would be divided. Even so, a repeal would unleash the awesome power of loss aversion, among the more deeply rooted human tendencies known to behavioral scientists. Their consistent finding: The amount of effort people will expend to resist being stripped of something they already possess is significantly larger than the effort they will devote to acquiring something they don’t already have.
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla's new illustrated biography of Alexander Hamilton is featured in a holiday book roundup

Excerpt from Triblive.com -- "Here's another way to learn about the 10-dollar founding father without a father: This gorgeous illustrated biography, written by noted Alexander Hamilton scholar Richard Sylla (who's also the chairman of the Museum of American Finance)."
School News

Isser Gallogly, Associate Dean of MBA Admissions and Program Innovation, is interviewed about Stern's MBA program and shares advice for prospective students

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Excerpt from Accepted.com -- "We value IQ and EQ – both intelligence and leadership. Our approach to academics is distinctive: it’s a mixed approach (not just lecture based or case-based, but a mix of approaches). We provide a range of opportunities; our courses are taught by a range of faculty (from Nobel Prize winners to practitioners who teach part time). There’s a lot of flexibility in the program – you can pursue between up to three specializations (or no specialization). And you can take classes overseas, or at other NYU grad schools."
Faculty News

Professor Tensie Whelan discusses her research on the business case for sustainability

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Excerpt from Green Sense Radio -- "We found that there's a variety of different drivers for positive financial performance when you embed sustainability. So operational efficiencies where you reduce energy costs and water costs are a big part of it. But also, you can proactively drive innovation and come up with new processes and new products that can actually create competitive advantage and bring in new sources of funding."
School News

Stern's Fertitta Veterans Program is spotlighted

Excerpt from Beat the GMAT -- "The Fertitta Veterans Program, believed to be the only program of its kind at a U.S. business school, will begin in summer 2017 for members of the full-time MBA Class of 2019. The uniquely designed summer session will include an early start on selected coursework; career programming with access to corporations and alumni; engagement with veteran alumni mentors; and social activities."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Professor Amy Webb argues that the US government needs a Department of the Future

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Excerpt from Politico -- "Companies like IBM, Procter & Gamble and Google have relied on futurists to look at the fringe, map trends and build scenarios for the next 10, 20, 30 and even 50 years of their organizations and industries. Because of futures thinking, IBM — a company that was founded before there were cars, let alone computers — is at the forefront of artificial intelligence, modeling the ways in which our work will be augmented by machines."
School News

In a co-authored op-ed, PhD student Gualtiero Azzalini shares insights from his joint research on government methods for reducing deficits

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Excerpt from VoxEU -- "Fiscal adjustments based upon spending cuts are much less costly in terms of short-run output losses than those based upon tax increases. Adjustments based on tax increases are associated with large and prolonged recessions, whether the adjustment starts in a recession or not. The dynamic response of the economy to a consolidation programme does depend on whether it is adopted in a period of economic expansion, but the size of this source of non-linearity is small relative to the effect that depends on whether the consolidation is tax-based or expenditure-based."
Faculty News

Professor Pankaj Ghemawat is interviewed about his research on the DHL Global Connectedness Index

Excerpt from Global Trade Magazine -- "The research on the GCI was led by internationally acclaimed globalization expert Pankaj Ghemawat, who highlighted how emerging economies still lag behind on global connectedness. 'Advanced economies are about four times as deeply integrated into international capital flows, five times as much on people flows, and nine times with respect to information flows,' said Ghemawat."
Faculty News

Professor Richard Sylla discusses Donald Trump's approach to business regulation

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Excerpt from CNNMoney -- "'Trump is not committed to any ideology. He likes to make deals. In that sense, he is a bit like Franklin Roosevelt,' says Sylla. 'Roosevelt just tried a lot of programs and hoped some of them worked.'"
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran's forthcoming book, "Narratives and Numbers: The Value of Stories in Business," is featured in a winter book roundup

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "It comes from New York University Stern school professor -- and all around valuation guru -- Aswath Damodaran. I am all too aware that narrative is often used to distract from numbers, but if anyone can walk that line, it is Damodaran. During our Masters in Business conversation, I was impressed with his common sense, down-to-earth method of valuing companies, both private and public -- so much so that, I was compelled to pre-order his newest book."

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