School News

Former President Bill Clinton announced a new Stern Consulting Corps partnership

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Excerpt from USA Today -- "Clinton, the U.N. Special Envoy to Haiti, also announced a new partnership with New York University's Stern School of Business and the Center for Investment Facilitation. The effort aims to make it easier to invest in Haiti through the creation of what Clinton called a 'one-stop shop for potential investors.'"
School News

Prof. Hans Taparia discusses Stern's Social Problem-Based Entrepreneurship Class

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Excerpt from New York Post -- "In the spring semester, about 15 to 20 students take a three-week trip to India. When they return, they're buzzing with ideas [and] first-hand experiences."
School News

MBA student & veteran Lindsey Melki is paired with mentor NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg

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Excerpt from ABC News -- "In terms of the leadership and management, I think I have a good hold on that. Now I just need to translate that and transfer that to the corporate world, and that's why I'm here."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Spence on the US and global economic outlook

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Excerpt from CNBC -- “We were relying on the one growth engine in the world, which was the emerging economies coming out of the crisis, and now they've slowed down because of the hit they've taken primarily from Europe,”
Faculty News

An op-ed by Prof. Jonathan Haidt on the division between the left and right

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Excerpt from The New York Times Campaign Stops blog -- "America is not united and it is getting less and less unitable with each passing decade. You can see us coming apart in three simple graphs."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt on voter psychology

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Excerpt from NBCNews.com -- "Since 2004 they're going for the base. Outrage them and get them to the polls. That tends to suppress participation in the center, but it brings up turnout on the extremes and this contributes to the polarization. This is where we're stuck now."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Prof. Sinan Aral Speaks about Influence in Networks at Data Gotham 2012

Sinan Aral, Assistant Professor of Information, Operations and Management Sciences, (@sinanaral) recently spoke at Data Gotham 2012 where he made one pitch: to be doing more causal influence in data sets, particularly in networks.
Faculty News

Prof. Xavier Gabaix's research on shrouded prices is cited

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "This kind of puzzle – call it the hotel mini-bar problem – was explored a few years ago by economists Xavier Gabaix and David Laibson. The question is, is there some more transparent pricing scheme that aims for the same level of profitability as the companies which prefer to spring surprises on their customers? The answer is: no."
Faculty News

An op-ed by Prof. Michael Spence on the outlook for global economic growth

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "To the extent that this is true of other advanced economies, the global economy faces an extended multi-year period of low growth, with residual downside risk coming from policy gridlock and mistakes in Europe, the US and elsewhere. That scenario implies slower growth – possibly 1-1.5 percentage points slower – in developing countries, including China, again with a preponderance of downside risk."
Research Center Events

Serial Investor & Entrepreneur Brad Feld Shares Start-up Tips in Himelberg Speaker Series

As part of the Himelberg Speaker Series, Brad Feld, co-founder of TechStars, a mentor-driven start-up accelerator program, addressed a packed Cantor Boardroom at NYU Stern. An early stage investor and entrepreneur for more than 25 years, Feld shared several pieces of advice with Stern’s entrepreneurial community.
Faculty News

Prof. William Silber's book, "Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence," is on FT Goldman award shortlist

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Excerpt from Financial Times -- "The seven judges chose the shortlist – including Volcker, William Silber’s newly published life of Paul Volcker, the former Federal Reserve chairman, and Steve Jobs, Walter Isaacson’s account of the life and work of the late chief executive of Apple – from 17 longlisted titles. Lionel Barber, the FT’s editor, called it “the strongest list in terms of quality” since the prize was launched in 2005."
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla on the rights of private banks

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "'There is a common-law right to be in the banking business,' ... In 1916, he said there were 4,046 private banks in the U.S., but they fell out of favor after the Great Depression and with the advent of deposit insurance. Only a handful are left, said Mr. Sylla. 'It's not because they're illegal, but most people are going to prefer to deposit their money in an incorporated bank with deposit insurance,' he said. 'It's going to be more complicated for a private bank to get private insurance.'"
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Nobel Laureate and Prof. Robert Engle says eurobonds can save Europe's banks

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "If Germany could credibly assure financial markets that the euro zone will not break up, then sovereign differentials would be reduced, bank balance sheets would be improved and prospects for future growth would rise. How could Germany convince financial markets? One way would be by committing to back eurobonds or similar forms of debt mutualization. If $2 trillion of eurobonds were authorized to recapitalize the banks—and the first tranches sold and used to rescue the weakest banks—then confidence in the market would do the rest."
Press Releases

NYU Stern to Host Conference on “Measurable Marketing in the Path-to-Purchase”

The NYU Stern Center for Measurable Marketing conference will convene marketing leaders and top academics to explore the increasingly complex path-to-purchase, and the customer experience at the pre-purchase, at-purchase and post-purchase phases. Attendees will learn best practices along the path-to-purchase in measurement, digital, social and mobile, and hear from experts who are driving the new consumer journey.
Faculty News

An op-ed by Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the global economic outlook

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Excerpt from Project Syndicate -- "Ineffective governments with weak leadership are at the root of the problem. In democracies, repeated elections lead to short-term policy choices. In autocracies like China and Russia, leaders resist the radical reforms that would reduce the power of entrenched lobbies and interests, thereby fueling social unrest as resentment against corruption and rent-seeking boils over into protest."
Faculty News

Prof. Sinan Aral's research on the power of social networks to spread behavioral change is featured

Excerpt from Science News -- “'Prior work on political mobilization and motivation for voting has been focused on the individual,' says information economist Sinan Aral of New York University. 'This paper presents really nice large-scale evidence that political mobilization is a peer-to-peer activity.'”
Faculty News

Prof. Scott Galloway on Facebook's focus on HTML 5 vs. apps

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think logically, everyone thinks it's headed towards a mobile web HTML 5 but so far people seem to like their apps and apps have maintained huge share."
Faculty News

Prof. Vishal Singh's research on how prices affect milk-buying patterns is featured

Excerpt from Slate -- The research team—Romana Khan of Ozyegin University in Istanbul, Kanishka Misra of the London Business School, and Vishal Singh of NYU—collected scanner data from over 1,700 supermarkets for 2001 to 2006 to examine how milk-buying patterns differ around the country depending on whether lower-fat varieties of milk are cheaper than whole milk or exactly the same price.
Business and Policy Leader Events

Hugo Lindgren, Editor of The New York Times Magazine, Talks Candidly with MBA Students

As part of NYU Stern’s Block Lunch event series, hosted by the Dean’s Office, Hugo Lindgren, editor of The New York Times Magazine, engaged with more than 100 MBA students on September 10. Lindgren spoke candidly about his career, including a stint at Businessweek after the magazine was bought by Bloomberg. He also shared some of his strategic thinking for The New York Times Magazine, and offered some perspective on the challenges facing the print journalism industry in general today.
Research Center Events

Center for Global Economy and Business Holds Economic Outlook 2012

Professor Kim Schoenholtz of the NYU Stern Center for Global Economy and Business hosted a panel on the 2012 Economic Outlook with economists David Greenlaw, Jan Hatzius and Peter Hooper.
Faculty News

Prof. Arun Sundararajan on adding game features to corporate process

Excerpt from NetworkWorld -- "It's too early to tell whether the gamification trend has long-term potential, Sundararajan says. 'But there are a couple of reasons why I think it's promising.' The first is that employees are increasingly expecting to have technology at work that resembles what they use at home. 'They want the stuff that they see at work to be like Facebook, like Foursquare, like the iPhone,' he says. 'This is very different from 10 or 15 years ago, when there wasn't much technology developed just for the consumer.' And the trend is only accelerating, he adds."
Faculty News

Prof. Robert Frank's research, using a robot to determine what makes us trust others, is featured

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- “'It makes no sense to ascribe intentions to a robot,' said an author of the study, Robert H. Frank, an economics professor at Cornell. 'But it appears we have certain postures and gestures that we interpret in certain ways. When we see them, whether it’s a robot or a human, we’re affected by it, because of the pattern it evokes in our brain responses.'”
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Thomas Cooley & Peter Rupert discuss the economy using their European snapshot

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Excerpt from Reuters -- "The important policy question to ask now is which structural reforms and investments in human capital can make our longer-term growth options better. If we focus on quick monetary or stimulus fixes rather than those questions, then we can’t expect anything better than this slow, painful recovery."
Faculty News

Prof. Irv Schenkler on fallout from the Hollister models' behavior in South Korea

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Excerpt from NBCNews.com -- "Paradoxically, the controversy possibly could help Hollister, said NYU Stern School of Business management communication professor Irving Schenkler. “I think there’s a category for certain brands known as rebellious brands,” he said, pointing out that retailers like Calvin Klein and Nike have embraced provocative images and figures."
Faculty News

Prof. Michael Spence on US job growth prospects

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Excerpt from Council of Foreign Relations -- "I think we have to expand the -- turn the tradable sector into an employment engine again, which it has not been for a while. And that means keeping the healthy parts of it and finding, through a combination of public policy and reforms and investment on the one hand, and private sector investment and dynamism on the other, places where we can invest and compete."

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