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Globalization

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Globalization Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Globalization Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Globalization

The Composition Matters: Capital Inflows and Liquidity Crunch During a Global Economic Crisis

Authors
Shang-Jin Wei and Hui Tong
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

This article studies whether the volume and composition of capital flows affect the degree of credit crunch during the 2007–2009 crisis. Using data on 3,823 firms in 24 emerging countries, we find that, on average, the decline in stock prices was more severe for firms that are intrinsically more dependent on external finance for working capital. Interestingly, while the volume of capital flows per se has no significant effect, the composition matters a lot.

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Slow Pass-through Around the World: A New Import for Developing Countries?

Authors
Jeffrey Frankel, David Parsley, and Shang-Jin Wei
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Open Economies Review

Developing countries traditionally experience pass-through of exchange rate changes that is greater and more rapid than high-income countries experience. This is true equally of the determination of prices of imported goods, prices of local competitors' products, and the general CPI. But developing countries in the 1990s experienced a rapid downward trend in the degree of pass-through and speed of adjustment, more so than did high-income countries. As a consequence, slow and incomplete pass-through is no longer exclusively a luxury of industrial countries.

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Organizing the In-Between: The Population Dynamics of Network Weaving Organizations in the Global Interstate Network

Authors
Paul Ingram and Magnus Thor Torfason
Date
December 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Administrative Science Quarterly

This article examines the population dynamics and viability of network weavers, which are organizations that provide network relations for others. An analysis of the population dynamics of the intergovernmental organizations (IGOs) that are the basis of the interstate networks that influenced global economic relations, peace, and democracy in the 1815–2000 period show that IGO founding and failure depends on the ease and value of specific interstate relations.

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Domestic Institutions and the Bypass Effect of Financial Globalization

Authors
Shang-Jin Wei and Jiandong Ju
Date
November 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Journal: Economic Policy

This paper proposes a simple model to study how domestic institutions affect patterns of international capital flows. Inefficient financial system, and poor corporate governance, may be bypassed by two-way capital flows in which domestic savings leave the country in the form of financial capital outflows but domestic investment takes place via inward FDI. While financial globalization always improves the welfare of a developed country with a good financial system, its effect is ambiguous for a developing country with an inefficient financial sector or poor corporate governance.

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Inflation and the Inflation Risk Premium

Authors
Geert Bekaert and Xiaozheng Wang
Date
October 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Economic Policy

This article starts by discussing the concept of "inflation hedging" and provides estimates of "inflation betas" for standard bond and well-diversified equity indices for over 45 countries. We show that such standard securities are poor inflation hedges. Expanding the menu of assets to Treasury bills, foreign bonds, real estate and gold improves matters but inflation risk remains difficult to hedge. We then describe how state-of-the-art term structure research has tried to uncover estimates of the inflation risk premium, the compensation for bearing inflation risk.

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Branding Strategies and Tactics of Chinese and Indian Firms

Authors
Don Sexton
Date
September 24, 2010
Format
Working Paper
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Negotiation in China: How Universal?

Authors
Tao Zhigang, Shang-Jin Wei, and Penelope Chan
Date
September 1, 2010
Format
Case Study
Publisher
Harvard Business Review

This is a fictitious case in which Universal Studies, a major U.S. theme parks and resorts company, has to negotiate with China's central government to build its first theme park in the country. Students are divided into groups and each student is assigned a role as one of the negotiators or as an observer. The topics covered in the negotiation include the new theme park's location, ownership structure, size, nature of theme zones, local employment and hospitality training programmes.

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The need for quality standards in international comparisons

Authors
Eli Noam
Date
August 23, 2010
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Financial Times

As the world becomes interconnected, the interest in comparisons among countries has grown. A veritable cottage industry of comparison-spewing institutions has emerged, this author not excepted. Who of the 195?plus sovereign nations on this planet is the most democratic? The happiest? The most innovative? The most electronically connected? No problem, lists exist for everything.

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Development of financial markets in Asia and the Pacific

Authors
M. Suresh Sundaresan
Date
July 1, 2010
Format
Chapter
Book
BIS Papers, No 52: The international financial crisis and policy challenges in Asia and the Pacific

Suresh Sundaresan offers several insights on the development of financial markets in Asia and the Pacific. First, financial market development in the region should take account of the large number of households who are effectively unbanked, given the potential for positive feedback effects between financial markets, economic growth and stability. Second, there is a need for fundamental banking reforms of capital structures and liquidity sources to mitigate bankruptcy risks, as well as the cost to taxpayers of insolvency and bailouts.

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