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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

Direct and Indirect Effects of Regulation: A New Look at OSHA's Impact

Authors
Ann Bartel and L. Thomas
Date
April 1, 1985
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Law and Economics

An extended series of economic studies has failed to find any statistically significant impact on national injury rates due to the OSHA. Two distinct explanations for this apparent failure of OSHA have been put forward in these studies. For the purposes of this study, the first of these explanations will be called the "noncompliance hypothesis" and the second will be labeled the "inefficiency hypothesis." The first of these hypotheses leads immediately to two dilemmas, which can only be resolved by expanding the range of issues considered in an analysis of OSHA.

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Optimal Price and Inventory Adjustment in an Open-Economy Model of the Business Cycle

Authors
Robert Flood and Robert Hodrick
Date
January 1, 1985
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Quarterly Journal of Economics

This paper presents a macroeconomic model containing optimizing, inventory-holding firms that is consistent with a number of prominent empirical regularities concerning fluctuations in output, exchange rates, relative prices, and money. Prices are sticky, but they are not predetermined. Still, our model is consistent with exchange rate overshooting in the sense of Dornbusch. Typical sticky-price models allow a divergence between current production and current demand, but this divergence is never allowed to feed back into the model.

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A queueing system with general-use and limited-use servers

Authors
Linda Green
Date
January 1, 1985
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Operations Research

We consider a queueing system with two types of servers and two types of customers. General-use servers can provide service to either customer type while limited-use servers can be used only for one of the two. Though the apparent Markovian state space of this system is five-dimensional, we show that an aggregation results in an exact two-dimensional representation that is also Markovian. Matrix geometric theory is used to obtain approximations for the mean delay times and other measures of interest for each customer type.

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Retrenchment and Recovery: American Cities and the New York Experience

Authors
Raymond Horton and Charles Brecher
Date
January 1, 1985
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Public Administration Review

This paper relates New York City's experience since 1975, a period characterized by local economic and fiscal crisis and a gradual recovery from it, to four prevailing themes in the contemporary literature of cities and public administration.

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As the Ax Falls: Budget Cuts and the Experience of Stress in Organizations

Authors
Todd Jick
Date
January 1, 1985
Format
Chapter
Book
Stress and Cognition in Organizations: An Integrated Perspective
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Taking Stock of Organizational Decline Management

Authors
Todd Jick
Date
January 1, 1985
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Management
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A fixed point approach to undiscounted Markov renewal programs

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Paul Schweitzer
Date
December 1, 1984
Format
Journal Article
Journal
SIAM Journal on Algebraic and Discrete Methods

This paper establishes a simple existence proof for a solution to the optimality equations arising in finite undiscounted Markov Renewal Programs, by applying Brouwer's fixed point theorem to the so-called reduced value-iteration operator. Because of its simplicity, our approach lends itself to new existence results for more general models.

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A queueing system with auxiliary servers

Authors
Linda Green
Date
October 1, 1984
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

We examine a queueing system with multiple primary servers and a fewer number of auxiliary servers. There are two classes of customers—those who require service from a primary server working alone and those who require service from a primary server who is assisted by an auxiliary server. Though the apparent Markovian state space is five-dimensional, we show that an aggregation results in an exact two-dimensional representation which is Markovian. Matrix geometric theory is used to obtain approximations for the mean delay and blocking probability of each customer type.

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An <em>M/G/c</em> queue in which the number of servers required is random

Authors
Awi Federgruen and Linda Green
Date
September 1, 1984
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Applied Probability

Many queueing situations such as computer, communications and emergency systems have the feature that customers may require service from several servers at the same time. They may thus be delayed until the required number of servers is avialable and servers may be idle when customers are waiting. We consider general server-completion-time distributions and derive approximation methods for the computation of the steady-state distribution of the number of customers in queue as well as the moments of the waiting-time distribution. Extensive computational results are reported.

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