Latest on Decision Making & Negotiations
Decision Making & Negotiations
Decision Making & Negotiations Research
Person Perception in the Heat of Conflict: Negative Trait Attributions Affect Procedural Preferences and Account for Situational and Cultural Differences
- Authors
- Date
- August 1, 2004
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Asian Journal of Social Psychology
Disputes by their nature involve contentious behavior. If one attributes such behavior to underlying personality traits, these attributions can be quite damning. The current research investigated negative trait attributions and their impact on dispute resolution decisions. We hypothesized that judging one's opponent to be low in agreeableness and high in emotionality (e.g. stubborn and volatile) shifts one?s preference towards more formal procedures ? formal in the sense that a third party judge controls the process and outcome.
Interpreting the Other Person's Behavior in the Heat of Conflict: Negative Trait Attributions Affect Dispute Resolution Procedure Preferences and Account for Situational and Cultural Differences
- Authors
- Date
- August 1, 2004
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Asian Journal of Social Psychology
Disputes by their nature involve contentious behavior. If one attributes such behavior to underlying personality traits, these attributions can be quite damning. The current research investigated negative trait attributions and their impact on dispute resolution decisions. We hypothesized that judging one's opponent to be low in agreeableness and high in emotionality (e.g. stubborn and volatile) shifts one's preference towards more formal procedures ? formal in the sense that a third party judge controls the process and outcome.
Credit Card Securitization and Regulatory Arbitrage
- Authors
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Charles Calomiris and Joseph Mason
- Date
- August 1, 2004
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Financial Services Research
This paper explores the motivations and desirability of off-balance sheet financing of credit card receivables by banks. We explore three related issues: the degree to which securitizations result in the transfer of risk out of the originating bank, the extent to which securitization permits banks to economize on capital by avoiding regulatory minimum capital requirements, and whether banks'' avoidance of minimum capital regulation through securitization with implicit recourse has been undesirable from a regulatory standpoint.
Optimal Corporate Securities Values in the Presence of Chapter 7 and Chapter 11
In a contingent claims framework, with a single issue of debt and full information, we show that the presence of a bankruptcy code with automatic stay, absolute priority rules, and potential debt forgiveness, can lead to significant conflicts of interest between the borrowers and lenders. In the first-best outcome, the code can add significant value to both parties by way of higher debt capacity, lower spreads, and improvement in the overall value of the firm.
Improving emergency responsiveness with management science
- Authors
- Date
- August 1, 2004
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Management Science
While the goal of OR/MS is to aid decision makers, implementation of published models occurs less frequently than one might hope. However, one area that has been significantly impacted by management science is emergency response systems. Dozens of papers on emergency service management appeared in the OR/MS literature in the 1970s alone, many of which were published in Management Science. Three of these papers won major prizes. More importantly, many of these papers led to the implementation of substantially new policies and practices, particularly in policing and firefighting.
Integrating Managerial and Tax Objectives in Transfer Pricing
- Authors
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Tim Baldenius and Stefan Reichelstein
- Date
- July 1, 2004
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Accounting Review
This paper examines transfer pricing in multinational firms when individual divisions face different income tax rates. Assuming that a firm decouples its internal transfer price from the arm's length price used for tax purposes, we analyze the effectiveness of alternative pricing rules under both cost- and market-based transfer pricing. In a tax-free world, Hirshleifer (1956) advocated that the internal transfer price be set equal to the marginal cost of the supplying division.
Price Manipulation and Quasi-Arbitrage
- Authors
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Gur Huberman and Werner Stanzl
- Date
- July 1, 2004
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Econometrica
In an environment where trading volume affects security prices and where prices are uncertain when trades are submitted, quasi-arbitrage is the availability of a series of trades that generate infinite expected profits with an infinite Sharpe ratio. We show that when the price impact of trades is permanent and time-independent, only linear price-impact functions rule out quasi-arbitrage and thus support viable market prices. When trades have also a temporary price impact, only the permanent price impact must be linear while the temporary one can be of a more general form.
Bank Capital and Portfolio Management: The 1930s, "Capital Crunch," and Scramble to Shed Risk
- Authors
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Charles Calomiris and Berry Wilson
- Date
- July 1, 2004
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Business
We model the trade-off between low-asset risk and low leverage to satisfy preferences for low-risk deposits and apply it to interwar New York City banks. During the 1920s, profitable lending and low costs of raising capital produced increased bank asset risk and increased capital, with no deposit risk change. Differences in the costs of raising equity explain differences in asset risk and capital ratios. In the 1930s, rising deposit default risk led to deposit withdrawals. In response, banks increased riskless assets and cut dividends.