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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

Influence Costs and Capital Structure

Authors
Laurie Simon Hodrick and Josef Zechner
Date
January 1, 1993
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

This paper analyzes the role of capital structure in the presence of intrafirm influence activities. The hierarchical structure of large organizations inevitably generates attempts by members to influence the distributive consequences of organizational decisions. In corporations, for example, top management can reallocate or eliminate quasi rents earned by their employees, while at the same time, they must rely on these employees to provide them with information vital to their decision making.

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Technological Change and the Retirement Decisions of Older Workers

Authors
Ann Bartel and Nachum Sicherman
Date
January 1, 1993
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Labor Economics

According to human capital theory, technological change will influence the retirement decisions of older workers in two ways. First, workers in industries with high rates of technological change will retire later if there is a net positive correlation between technological change and on-the-job training. Second, an unexpected change in the rate of technological change will induce older workers to retire sooner because the required amount of retraining will be an unattractive investment.

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Incomplete Contracts, Vertical Integration, and Supply Assurance

Authors
Patrick Bolton and Michael Whinston
Date
January 1, 1993
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Economic Studies

This paper extends the analysis of transactions cost models of vertical integration to multilateral settings. Its main focus is on supply assurance concerns which arise when several downstream firms are competing for inputs in limited supply. Integration reduces supply assurance concerns for an integrating firm but it may increase them for others. Therefore, to explain the scope of any firm, one must consider the overall network of production and distribution relations.

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A Comparison of the Value-Relevance of U.S. versus Non-U.S. GAAP Accounting Measures Using Form 20-F Reconciliations

Authors
Trevor Harris and E. Venuti
Date
January 1, 1993
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting Research

Firms registered outside the United States and listed on a primary U.S. exchange may provide their U.S. shareholders with financial statements prepared under their domestic (non-U.S.) generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). The Securities and Exchange Commission requires such firms to reconcile their reported earnings and shareholders' equity to U.S. GAAP as part of a Form 20-F filing. These reconciliations provide a set of precise measures of the differences created by alternative accounting practices.

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Price-Earnings and Price-to-Book Anomalies: Tests of an Intrinsic Value Explanation

Authors
Trevor Harris and P. M. Fairfield
Date
January 1, 1993
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Contemporary Accounting Research

Price deviations from basic valuation models based on accounting earnings and book value of owners' equity are used to test the intrinsic value explanation of the price-earnings and price-book value anomalies. Relative price deviations from the implied benchmark prices are used to assign years into high and low deviation groups. Traditional zero investment hedge portfolios are formed in each year, and the returns are compared across high and low deviation years.

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An Investigation of Revaluations of Tangible Long-Lived Assets

Authors
Peter Easton, Peter Eddey, and Trevor Harris
Date
January 1, 1993
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting Research

This paper documents the revaluation practice over a ten-year period from 1981 of a large sample of Australian firms and examines the association between these revaluations and stock market prices and returns. The analysis uses several different approaches in order to obtain a thorough understanding of the reevaluation process in Australia. We include a description of hand-collected data from published financial statements, follow-up interviews with chief financial officers of the sample firms, and association tests between hand-collected accounting data and stock market measures.

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Privatization in Central and Eastern Europe

Authors
Patrick Bolton and Gerard Roland
Date
October 1, 1992
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Economic Policy

This paper assesses policies of mass privatization in Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland. A central concern stemming from the analysis is that, in view of the fiscal crisis facing economies in transition, it is crucial for governments to try to maximize the proceeds from the sale of state assets. Because of the low initial level of private wealth, it is important, in this respect, to let potential buyers borrow from the government or issue claims on future revenues (obtained with the privatized assets) to the government in order to pay for the privatized firms.

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An Incomplete Contracts Approach to Financial Contracting

Authors
Patrick Bolton and Philippe Aghion
Date
July 1, 1992
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Economic Studies

We analyze incomplete long-term financial contracts between an entrepreneur with no initial wealth and a wealthy investor. Both agents have potentially conflicting objectives since the entrepreneur cares about both pecuniary and non-pecuniary returns from the project while the investor is only concerned about monetary returns.

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Characterizing Predictable Components in Excess Returns on Equity and Foreign Exchange Markets

Authors
Geert Bekaert and Robert Hodrick
Date
June 1, 1992
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

The paper first characterizes the predictable components in excess rates of returns on major equity and foreign exchange markets using lagged excess returns, dividend yields, and forward premiums as instruments. Vector autoregressions (VARs) demonstrate one-step-ahead predictability and facilitate calculations of implied long-horizon statistics, such as variance ratios. Estimation of latent variable models then subjects the VARs to constraints derived from dynamic asset pricing theories.

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