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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

On the Upsides of Aggregation

Authors
A. Arya and Jonathan Glover
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Management Accounting Research

Aggregation, and minimizing associated information loss, is a pervasive theme in accounting. In contrast, this paper highlights some potential benefits of aggregation, using simple examples to illustrate ideas from a number of recent papers in a parsimonious manner. Aggregation rules can improve decision making because of their ability to convey appropriate information and because such rules may permit offsetting errors. Turning to control problems, aggregation has merit in the provision of both explicit and implicit incentives.

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A Bayesian Semiparametric Approach for Endogeneity and Heterogeneity in Choice Models

Authors
Yang Li and Asim Ansari
Date
January 1, 2014
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Management Science

Marketing variables that are included in consumer discrete choice models are often endogenous. Extant treatments using likelihood-based estimators impose parametric distributional assumptions, such as normality, on the source of endogeneity. These assumptions are restrictive because misspecified distributions have an impact on parameter estimates and associated elasticities. The normality assumption for endogeneity can be inconsistent with some marginal cost specifications given a price-setting process, although they are consistent with other specifications.

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Moral Hazard and Debt Maturity

Authors
Gur Huberman
Date
December 1, 2013
Format
Working Paper

We present a model of the maturity of a bank's uninsured debt. The bank borrows funds and chooses afterwards the riskiness of its assets. This moral hazard problem leads to an excessive level of risk. Short-term debt may have a disciplining effect on the bank's risk-shifting incentives, but it may lead to inefficient liquidation. We characterize the conditions under which short-term and long-term debt are feasible, and show circumstances under which only short-term debt is feasible and under which short-term debt dominates long-term debt when both are feasible.

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The Economics of Hedge Funds

Authors
Yingcong Lan, Neng Wang, and Jinqiang Yang
Date
November 1, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

Hedge fund managers trade o the benefits of leveraging on the alpha-generating strategy against the costs of inefficient fund liquidation. In contrast to the standard risk-seeking intuition, even with a constant-return-to-scale alpha-generating strategy, a risk-neutral manager becomes endogenously risk-averse and decreases leverage following poor performance to increase the fund's survival likelihood. Our calibration suggests that management fees are the majority of the total compensation.

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The Economic and Policy Consequences of Catastrophes

Authors
Robert Pindyck and Neng Wang
Date
November 1, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Journal: Economic Policy

How likely is a catastrophic event that would substantially reduce the capital stock, GDP, and wealth? How much should society be willing to pay to reduce the probability or impact of a catastrophe? We answer these questions and provide a framework for policy analysis using a general equilibrium model of production, capital accumulation, and household preferences.

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Information Spillovers from Protests Against Corporations: A Tale of Walmart and Target

Authors
Lori Qingyuan Yue, Hayagreeva Rao, and Paul Ingram
Date
October 21, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Administrative Science Quarterly

In this study of the impact of protests against Walmart (a first entrant) on Target (a second entrant) from 1998 to 2008 in U.S. geographic markets, we develop and test a theory of information spillovers from protests against corporations proposing to enter a new market. We argue that the number of protests directed against a first entrant is a noisy signal for the second entrant because such protests are likely to be dominated by protest-prone activists and so do not reflect the sentiments of the community.

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Conditioned Superstition: Desire for Control and Consumer Brand Preferences

Authors
Eric Hamerman and Gita Johar
Date
October 20, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Research

If individuals buy a Snickers bar and subsequently see their favorite basketball team begin to play better, they might attribute this improved performance to their purchase decision. Even as consumers acknowledge that this type of control is irrational, we demonstrate that they are willing to superstitiously alter their purchase behavior (by choosing a less-preferred option) in hopes of helping their favorite team.

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The Seven Sins of Consumer Psychology

Authors
Michel Tuan Pham
Date
October 1, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Consumer Psychology

Consumer psychology faces serious issues of internal and external relevance. Most of these issues originate in seven fundamental problems with the way consumer psychologists plan and conduct their research that could be called the seven sins of consumer psychology.

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Buying and Selling Information under Competition

Authors
Yi Xiang and Miklos Sarvary
Date
September 1, 2013
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Quantitave Marketing and Economics

Markets for information products exhibit varying degrees of competition on both the supply and the demand side. This paper studies the potential complementarity of information products, equilibrium information buying behaviors and information price setting in such markets. Our game-theoretic model consists of two information providers selling imperfect information to two competing clients and allows for different information quality levels as well as varying degrees of client competition.

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