Faculty News

Prof. Laura Veldkamp on Mario Draghi's European Parliament speech

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Excerpt from Associated Press -- "I would say this is a big change. Traditionally, the ECB has seen its only objective as maintaining a stable, low rate of inflation." Additional coverage appeared in Tribune-Chronicle.com, The Boston Globe, STLToday.com, Palm Beach Post, Dayton Daily News, Newser.com, Marshall Independent, AJC.com, BND.com, among other outlets.
Faculty News

Prof. Thomas Philippon sees the beginnings of a credit crunch in Europe

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Excerpt from The Washington Post -- “You have the beginnings of a credit crunch in Europe. ... [Banks] are limiting their dollar activities. French banks have large operations in Italy — and they’re shrinking. Austrian banks have large operations in Eastern Europe — and they’re shrinking.”
Faculty News

Prof. Paul Romer's charter cities idea is featured as a solution to save Detroit

Excerpt from The Daily -- "Romer’s charter cities concept involves creating what he calls “reform zones.” The idea is to let a government with a track record of success run parts of a country, on the theory that the key drivers of progress are rational rules and functional institutions." Additional coverage appeared in Reason.com.
Faculty News

Prof. Richard Sylla will moderate a Q&A session at the Museum of American Finance on 12/7

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "Museum of American Finance: Volcker Talk (Wednesday) Paul Volcker, who served under five presidents, speaks as part of the Henry Kaufman Lecture/Symposia Series. The presentation will be followed by a reception and question-and-answer session moderated by Dr. Richard Sylla, a New York University professor and the chairman of the museum."
Faculty News

Prof. Anthony Karydakis on US consumers' borrowing habits

Excerpt from Money Morning -- "Slowly but steadily, consumers are exploring more normal ways of returning to a more normal pattern when it comes to borrowing habits."
Faculty News

Prof. Joseph Foudy on NYC's regional council plan

Excerpt from Washington Square News -- "The city's economy is so large and so tied to finance and international economic trends that there is so little the city can do at all to move its economy in any direction."
Faculty News

Overseers Board Member Chandrika Tandon performed a concert benefiting the Global Peace Initiative

Excerpt from Indo-American News -- “The combination of different instruments and Chandrika’s voice revealed to me what World Music should be all about."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt's research on moral theory and relationships is cited

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Excerpt from The Guardian -- "Probably the most important work recently was that of Jonathan Haidt (professor of psychology at the University of Virginia) who looked at a moral theory and talked about importance of relationships."
Faculty News

Member of the Overseers Board Peter Schoenfeld (ARTS '66, MBA '68) is featured

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Excerpt from New York Observer -- "Sitting on the board of N.Y.U.’s Stern Business School, hedge funder Peter Schoenfeld knows a thing or two about economics: buy low, sell high."
Faculty News

The proposals set forth in "Regulating Wall Street," by NYU Stern faculty, are featured

Excerpt from Euromoney -- "The academics at NYU Stern have proposed a repo clearing house or repo resolution authority that would step in and allow for an orderly liquidation of collateral backing repo contracts should there be a shock to an asset class such as mortgages."
Faculty News

Prof. Nouriel Roubini on the labor force's share of income

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Excerpt from The Huffington post -- "The [labor force's] share dropped to 57.1 percent, according to economist Nouriel Roubini, compared to an average of nearly 65 percent percent before the year 2000."
Student Club Events

16th Annual Graduate Finance Association Conference: Navigating Uncertain Waters

Eric Varvel, Chief Executive Officer of Credit Suisse's Global Investment Bank, headlined the conference. He shared his unique insights on the status of the world economy in his presentation entitled "Adapting to Change."
Faculty News

Research Scholar Robert Frank's book, "The Darwin Economy," is featured

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Excerpt from TIME -- "In a remarkable new book, "The Darwin Economy," economist Robert Frank explores how these sorts of arms races play out in myriad areas of economic life—and how we could create a more productive economy if we understood their nature and impact."
Faculty News

Nobel Laureate Prof. Robert Engle on the NYU Stern Global Systemic Risk Rankings

CNBC logo
Excerpt from CNBC Squawk Box -- "The rating has to do with the risk the company will go under. This risk has to do with whether they will go under when the economy tanks."
Faculty News

Prof. Viral Acharya on the European Banks' dollar shortages

Reuters logo
Excerpt from Reuters -- "It could lead to fire sales of assets, which would have further spiraling effects on other firms in the economy. ... This is an aggressive move to meet the dollar shortages of the European banks. ... It is a signal that the situation is getting pretty tight for the banks." Additional coverage appeared in Yahoo! News, Chicago Tribune, and lse.co.uk.
Faculty News

Prof. Thomas Philippon on bank layoffs

Wall Street Journal logo
Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- So far, job losses in finance have not been so large relative to the rest of the economy. ... There will be more to come.
Faculty News

Research Scholar Robert Frank's book, "The Winner-Take-All Society," is referenced

Excerpt from Bloomberg Businessweek -- "Robert Frank, the Cornell economist, argued in 'The Winner-Take-All Society,' culture and technology narrow the market for pro athletes and entertainers — and, more recently, business and the professions — in a way that offers outsized rewards to a few stars."
Faculty News

An op-ed by Prof. Daniel Altman on accounting for general equilibrium effects

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Excerpt from BigThink -- "Microfinance, once viewed as a panacea for the economic problems of the poor, may also suffer from a general equilibrium problem. Even though extending credit to poor women has allowed many thousands of them to start small businesses and invest in household essentials, it hasn’t been proven to reduce poverty."
Faculty News

An op-ed by Prof. Amity Shlaes on the influence of Taylor Swift

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Swift, the phenom, suggests the market for pop culture features elements of a vicious cycle perpetuated by music professionals, at least in the case of girls." Additional coverage appeared in Bloomberg Businessweek and San Francisco Chronicle.
Faculty News

An excerpt from "Guaranteed to Fail," by NYU Stern faculty, is featured

Excerpt from National Review Online -- "Clearly, the United States is an outlier in its government involvement in mortgage markets, providing much more support than does any other country."
Faculty News

In an op-ed, Prof. Nouriel Roubini says Italy's debt must be restructured

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Excerpt from Financial Times, The A-List blog -- "It is increasingly clear that Italy’s public debt is unsustainable and needs an orderly restructuring to avert a disorderly default." Additional coverage appeared in CNBC, Bloomberg, Bloomberg Businessweek, Forbes, and Speigel.de.
Faculty News

Prof. Nicholas Economides on the role of the US Federal Reserve

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Excerpt from The Huffington Post -- "Ultimately everybody in the markets believes that the lender of last resort is really the Federal Reserve."
Faculty News

Prof. Paul Romer's plan for charter cities in Honduras is cited

Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Let’s have the government allocate 20 of its more than 10,000 square miles of public land to build a charter city. We can call it Romerton after New York University economist Paul Romer, who is organizing a charter city for Honduras."
Faculty News

A speech by Prof. Sinan Aral on measuring influence in social networks is featured

Excerpt from YouTube -- "Sinan Aral is an Assistant Professor and Microsoft Faculty Fellow at the NYU Stern School of Business. He studies how behavioral contagions spread through social networks -- from products to productivity to public health."
Faculty News

Prof. Jonathan Haidt's research on morality is highlighted

Excerpt from Financial Post -- "Dr. Haidt notes that what makes morality — our notions of good and bad, and right and wrong — so hard to examine is the nature of morality itself, which has been a topic of philosophical inquiry since before Socrates." Additional coverage appeared in Financial Post.

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