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Organizations & Markets

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

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Organizations & Markets Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Organizations & Markets

Does Corporate Governance Risk at Home Affect Investment Choices Abroad?

Authors
Woochan Kim, Taeyoon Sung, and Shang-Jin Wei
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of International Economics

Disparity between control and ownership rights gives rise to the risk of tunneling by the controlling shareholder. This disparity is prevalent in many emerging market economies and present in some developed countries. This paper studies whether and how the degree of control-ownership disparity in investors' home countries affects their portfolio choice in an emerging market. It combines two unique data sets on ownership and control in business groups, and investor-stock level foreign investment in Korea.

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Sovereign Default Risk in Financially Integrated Economies

Authors
Patrick Bolton and Olivier Jeanne
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
IMF Economic Review

We analyze contagious sovereign debt crises in financially integrated economies. Under financial integration banks optimally diversify their holdings of sovereign debt in an effort to minimize the costs with respect to an individual country"s sovereign debt default. While diversification generates risk diversification benefits ex ante, it also generates contagion ex post. We show that financial integration without fiscal integration results in an inefficient equilibrium supply of government debt.

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Risk, Uncertainty, and Option Exercise

Authors
Neng Wang and Jianjun Miao
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control

Many economic decisions can be described as an option exercise or optimal stopping problem under uncertainty. Motivated by experimental evidence such as the Ellsberg Paradox, we follow Knight (1921) and distinguish risk from uncertainty. To afford this distinction, we adopt the multiple-priors utility model. We show that the impact of ambiguity on the option exercise decision depends on the relative degrees of ambiguity about continuation payoffs and termination payoffs. Consequently, ambiguity may accelerate or delay option exercise.

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General Motors: Capital Structure and the Costs of Financial Distress

Authors
Daniel Wolfenzon, Trevor Harris, and Andrew Hertzberg
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Case Study
Publisher
CaseWorks
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Why bank governance is different

Authors
Marco Becht and Patrick Bolton
Date
January 1, 2011
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Oxford Review of Economic Policy

This paper reviews the pattern of bank failures during the financial crisis and asks whether there was a link with corporate governance. It revisits the theory of bank governance and suggests a multiconstituency approach that emphasizes the role of weak creditors. The empirical evidence suggests that, on average, banks with stronger risk officers, less independent boards, and executives with less variable remuneration incurred fewer losses. There is no evidence that institutional shareholders opposed aggressive risk-taking.

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Interest Rates and the Postretirement Benefit Expense

Authors
Doron Nissim
Date
December 31, 2010
Format
Working Paper
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Activists, Categories and Markets: Racial Diversity and Protests against Wal-Mart Store Openings in America

Authors
Hayagreeva Rao, Lori Yue, and Paul Ingram
Date
December 21, 2010
Format
Book
Publisher
Emerald Publishing Limited

Identity movements rely on a shared "we-feeling" amongst a community of participants. In turn, such shared identities are possible when movement participants can self-categorize themselves as belonging to one group. We address a debate as to whether community diversity enhances or impedes such protests, and investigate the role of racial diversity since it is a simple, accessible, and visible basis of community diversity and social categorization.

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Analysis and Valuation of Insurance Companies

Authors
Doron Nissim
Date
December 1, 2010
Format
Working Paper

During 2008 and 2009, the insurance industry experienced unprecedented volatility. The large swings in insurers' market valuations, and the significant role that financial reporting played in the uncertainty surrounding insurance companies during that period, highlight the importance of understanding insurers' financial information and its implications for the risk and value of insurance companies.

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Stuck in the Middle: Impacts of Grade Configuration in Public Schools

Authors
Benjamin Lockwood and Jonah Rockoff
Date
December 1, 2010
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Public Economics

We examine the implications of separating students of different grade levels across schools for the purposes of educational production. Specifically, we find that moving students from elementary to middle school in 6th or 7th grade causes significant drops in academic achievement. These effects are large (about 0.15 standard deviations), present for both math and English, and persist through grade 8, the last year for which we have achievement data. The effects are similar for boys and girls, but stronger for students with low levels of initial achievement.

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