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Decision Making & Negotiations

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Decision Making & Negotiations Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Decision Making & Negotiations

Decision Making & Negotiations Research

Contextual Inverse Optimization: Offline and Online Learning

Authors
Omar Besbes, Yuri Fonseca, and Ilan Lobel
Date
January 1, 2021
Format
Working Paper

We study the problems of offline and online contextual optimization with feedback information, where instead of observing the loss, we observe, after-the-fact, the optimal action an oracle with full knowledge of the objective function would have taken. We aim to minimize regret, which is defined as the difference between our losses and the ones incurred by an all-knowing oracle.

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Moderating Loss Aversion: Loss Aversion Has Moderators but Reports of its Death are Greatly Exaggerated

Authors
Kellen Mrkva, Eric Johnson, Simon Gätcher, and Andreas Herrmann
Date
December 19, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Psychology

Loss aversion, the principle that losses impact decision making more than equivalent gains, is a fundamental idea in consumer behavior and decision making, though its existence has recently been called into question. Across five unique samples (Ntotal = 17,720), we tested several moderators of loss aversion, which supported a preference construction account. Across studies, more domain knowledge and experience were associated with lower loss aversion, though people of all knowledge and experience levels were loss averse.

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How Does Household Spending Respond to an Epidemic? Consumption During the 2020 COVID-19 Pandemic

Authors
Michaela Pagel
Date
December 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Review of Asset Pricing Studies

Utilizing transaction-level financial data, we explore how household consumption responded to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. As case numbers grew and cities and states enacted shelter-in-place orders, Americans began to radically alter their typical spending across a number of major categories. In the first half of March 2020, individuals increased total spending by over 40% across a wide range of categories.

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Learning to Disclose: Disclosure Dynamics in the 1890s Streetcar Industry

Authors
Thomas Bourveau, Matthias Breuer, and Robert Stoumbos
Date
December 1, 2020
Format
Working Paper

We study the descriptiveness of the “unravelling” prediction in the 1890s streetcar industry. In this historical setting, capital-intensive streetcar companies gain the opportunity to disclose their earnings to dispersed investors via a new, quarterly newspaper supplement. We document that a quarter of the companies withhold their earnings from the first supplement, inconsistent with the “unravelling” prediction.

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The Color of Money: Federal vs. Industry Funding of University Research

Authors
Tania Babina, Alex Xi He, Sabrina Howell, Elisabeth Perlman, and Joseph Staudt
Date
November 22, 2020
Format
Working Paper

U.S. universities have experienced a shift in research funding away from federal and towards private industry sources. This paper evaluates whether the source of funding -- federal or private industry -- is relevant for commercialization of research outputs. We link person-level grant data from 22 universities to patent and career outcomes (including IRS W-2 records). To identify a causal effect, we exploit individual-level variation in exposure to narrow federal R&D programs stemming from pre-existing field specialization.

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The Influence of Pensions on Labor Supply

Authors
Andrew C. Johnston and Jonah Rockoff
Date
November 11, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
2020 APPAM Fall Research Conference

We cast new light on the influence of pensions on labor supply. To do so, we compare the retention patterns of pension-eligible workers to those of pension-ineligible ones, allowing us to non-parametrically identify the counterfactual in large, administrative data. Pensions exert a retentive force as workers approach the eligibility threshold and apply strong expulsive pressure thereafter (since employees lose pension wealth by remaining employed once eligible).

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Prior-Independent Optimal Auctions

Authors
Amine Allouah and Omar Besbes
Date
October 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

Auctions are widely used in practice. While also extensively studied in the literature, most of the developments rely on the significant common prior assumption. We study the design of optimal prior-independent selling mechanisms: buyers do not have any information about their competitors and the seller does not know the distribution of values, but only a general class it belongs to.

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Destructive Creation at Work: How Financial Distress Spurs Entrepreneurship

Authors
Tania Babina
Date
September 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Review of Financial Studies

Using US Census employer-employee matched data, I show that employer financial distress accelerates the exit of employees to found start-ups. This effect is particularly evident when distressed firms are less able to enforce contracts restricting employee mobility into competing firms. Entrepreneurs exiting financially distressed employers earn higher wages prior to the exit and after founding start-ups, compared to entrepreneurs exiting non-distressed firms. Consistent with distressed firms losing higher-quality workers, their start-ups have higher average employment and payroll growth.

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Risky choice frames shift the structure and emotional valence of internal arguments: A query theory account of the unusual disease problem

Authors
Daniel Wall, Raymond D. Crookes, Eric Johnson, and Elke Weber
Date
September 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Judgment and Decision Making

We examine a Query Theory account of risky choice framing effects — when risky choices are framed as a gain, people are generally risky averse but, when an equivalent choice is framed as a loss, people are risk seeking. Consistent with Query Theory, frames affected the structure of participants’ arguments: gain frame participants listed arguments favoring the certain option earlier and more often than loss frame participants. These argumentative shifts mediated framing effects; manipulating participants initial arguments attenuated them.

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