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Publication records

Working Paper

International standards and international trade: Empirical evidence from ISO 9000 diffusion

NBER Working Paper No. 18132
Joseph A. Clougherty, Michał Grajek (2012)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
Networks, international trade, standards, technical trade barriers, ISO 9000
JEL Code(s)
C51, F13, L15
Pages
57
ISSN (Print)
0898-2937
ESMT Working Paper

Performance implications of core and complementary pre-entry experience: The role of consumer heterogeneity in mobile telephony

ESMT Working Paper No. 11-03 (R2)
J.P. Eggers, Michał Grajek, Tobias Kretschmer (2012)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment; Strategy and general management; Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
pre-entry experience, mobile telecommunications, consumer segments, complementary assets, core technical knowledge
JEL Code(s)
C51, L10, O33
We study how two distinct types of pre-entry experience – core technological experience and market-based complementary experience – affect post-entry performance in a new industry. We focus on the fit between capabilities generated through pre-entry experience and the preferences of heterogeneous consumer segments. Specifically, we suggest that firms with pre-entry experience in the focal technology will attract more valuable consumers, but as these consumers typically make adoption decisions early the firm must enter early to benefit. Conversely, firms with pre-entry experience in the focal market will attract a larger share of less valuable consumers regardless of entry timing. Our empirical analysis of the global 2G mobile telecommunications industry supports our theory and provides important insights for research on experience and entry dynamics in high-technology industries.

 

View all ESMT Working Papers in the ESMT Working Paper Series here. ESMT Working Papers are also available via SSRN, RePEc, EconStor, and the German National Library (DNB).

Pages
38
ISSN (Print)
1866–3494
ESMT Working Paper

Competition, loan rates and information dispersion in microcredit markets

ESMT Working Paper No. 12-02
Guillermo Baquero, Malika Hamadi, Andréas Heinen (2012)
Subject(s)
Finance, accounting and corporate governance
Keyword(s)
bank competition, microfinance, microcredit, microbank, loan rates, information dispersion, PAR, portfolio quality
JEL Code(s)
D4, G21, L1, O1
We study the effects of competition on loan rates and portfolio-at-risk in microcredit markets using a new database from rating agencies, covering 379 microbanks located in 67 countries between 2002 and 2008. Our study reveals different competitive effects in nonprofit and for-profit microbanks. We find that for-profit microbanks charge significantly lower rates and exhibit improved portfolio-at-risk in less concentrated markets. In particular, the effect of concentration on loan rates is nearly three times the one reported in previous studies in banking. In contrast, nonprofit microbanks are relatively insensitive to changes in concentration. We control for interest rate ceilings, which very significantly reduce rates in for-profit microbanks. However, our study also uncovers a competitive interplay between for-profit and nonprofit microbanks. In particular, the PAR of nonprofit microbanks deteriorates when the proportion of profit-oriented microbanks increases. Finally, we find evidence consistent with dispersion of borrower-specific information among competing microbanks in the for-profit sector, even after controlling for the presence of credit registries.

 

View all ESMT Working Papers in the ESMT Working Paper Series here. ESMT Working Papers are also available via SSRN, RePEc, EconStor, and the German National Library (DNB).

Pages
57
ISSN (Print)
1866–3494
ESMT Working Paper

Identity challenges of women leaders: Antecedents and consequences of identity interference

Natalia Karelaia, Laura Guillén (2011)
Subject(s)
Human resources management/organizational behavior
Keyword(s)
Women leaders, identity interference, collective self-esteem, well-being, motivation to lead, leader development, organizational demography
We explore the antecedents and consequences of women leaders' identity interference related to the perceived conflict between their roles as both women and leaders. Drawing on identity development and organizational demography research, we propose that leadership experience reduces women leaders' identity interference, whereas women's numerical underrepresentation in organizations exacerbates it. Moreover, we hypothesize that identity processes related to collective self-esteem—personal regard for one's collective identity and the perception of others' views of it—mediate these effects. A sample of 722 women leaders representing a diverse range of countries and industries supported our hypotheses. We also demonstrate that identity interference reduces the psychological well-being of women leaders and undermines their affective motivation to lead. In contrast, perceived conflict between leader and female identities enhances women's sense of duty to assume leadership roles. Importantly, women leaders' personal regard for their female identity buffers the detrimental effect of identity interference on life satisfaction. We discuss the implications of our results for women's advancement in organizations and the development of their identity as leaders.

 

View all ESMT Working Papers in the ESMT Working Paper Series here. ESMT Working Papers are also available via SSRN, RePEc, EconStor, and the German National Library (DNB).

Pages
58
ISSN (Print)
1866–3494
ESMT Working Paper

The impact of school lunches on primary school enrollment: Evidence from India's midday meal scheme

ESMT Working Paper No. 11-11
Rajshri Jayaraman, Dora Simroth (2011)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
primary school enrollment, school lunches, natural experiment, ITT
At the end of 2001, the Indian Supreme Court issued a directive ordering states to institute school lunches – known locally as "midday meals" – in government primary schools. This paper provides a large-scale assessment of the enrollment effects of India's midday meal scheme, which offers warm lunches, free of cost, to 120 million primary school children across India and is the largest school feeding program in the world. To isolate the causal effect of the policy, we make use of staggered implementation across Indian states in government but not private schools. Using a panel data set of almost 500,000 schools observed annually from 2002 to 2004, we find that midday meals result in substantial increases in primary school enrollment, driven by early primary school responses to the program. Our results are robust to a wide range of specification tests.

 


View all ESMT Working Papers in the ESMT Working Paper Series here. ESMT Working Papers are also available via SSRN, RePEc, EconStor, and the German National Library (DNB).

Pages
46
ISSN (Print)
1866–3494
Working Paper

Psychodynamic issues in organizational leadership

INSEAD Working Paper No. 2011/121/EFE
Manfred Kets de Vries, Elizabeth Florent-Treacy, Konstantin Korotov (2011)
Subject(s)
Human resources management/organizational behavior
Keyword(s)
psychodynamics, leadership, leadership development
A pdf file of this working paper may be available at INSEAD.
ESMT Working Paper

Dynamic coordination via organizational routines

ESMT Working Paper No. 11-10
Andreas Blume, April M. Franco, Paul Heidhues (2011)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
coordination games, organizational routines, decentralized information, ex-post equilibria, cursed equilibria, multi-agent learning, rational learning
JEL Code(s)
C73, D23
We investigate dynamic coordination among members of a problem-solving team who receive private signals about which of their actions are required for a (static) coordinated solution and who have repeated opportunities to explore different action combinations. In this environment ordinal equilibria, in which agents condition only on how their signals rank their actions and not on signal strength, lead to simple patterns of behavior that have a natural interpretation as routines. These routines partially solve the team's coordination problem by synchronizing the team's search efforts and prove to be resilient to changes in the environment by being ex post equilibria, to agents having only a coarse understanding of other agents' strategies by being fully cursed, and to natural forms of agents' overconfidence. The price of this resilience is that optimal routines are frequently suboptimal equilibria.

 

View all ESMT Working Papers in the ESMT Working Paper Series here. ESMT Working Papers are also available via SSRN, RePEc, EconStor, and the German National Library (DNB).

Pages
58
ISSN (Print)
1866–3494
ESMT Working Paper

Naïve and capricious: Stumbling into the ring of self-control conflict

ESMT Working Paper No. 11-09
Kristian Ove R. Myrseth, Conny Wollbrant (2011)
Subject(s)
Ethics and social responsibility; Human resources management/organizational behavior; Management sciences, decision sciences and quantitative methods
Keyword(s)
Self-control, temptation, inter-temporal choice, pre-commitment
JEL Code(s)
D01, D03, D69, D90
We model self-control conflict as a stochastic struggle of an agent against a visceral influence, which impels the agent to act sub-optimally. The agent holds costly pre-commitment technology to avoid the conflict altogether and may decide whether to procure pre-commitment or to confront the visceral influence. We examine naïve expectations for the strength of the visceral influence; underestimating the visceral influence may lead the agent to exaggerate the expected utility of resisting temptation, and so mistakenly forego pre-commitment. Our analysis reveals conditions under which higher willpower – and lower visceral influence – reduces welfare. We further demonstrate that lowering risk aversion could reduce welfare. The aforementioned results call into question certain policy measures aimed at helping people improve their own behavior.

 

View all ESMT Working Papers in the ESMT Working Paper Series here. ESMT Working Papers are also available via SSRN, RePEc, EconStor, and the German National Library (DNB).

Pages
43
ISSN (Print)
1866–3494
ESMT Working Paper

Vertical coordination through renegotiation

Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
Vertical contracts, rent shifting, renegotiation, buyer power
This paper analyzes the strategic use of bilateral supply contracts in sequential negotiations between one manufacturer and two differentiated retailers. Allowing for general contracts and retail bargaining power, I show that the first contracting parties have incentives to manipulate their contract to shift rent from the second contracting retailer and these incentives distort the industry profit away from the fully integrated monopoly outcome. To avoid such distortion, the first contracting parties may prefer to sign a contract which has no commitment power and can be renegotiated from scratch should the manufacturer fail in its subsequent negotiation with the second retailer. Renegotiation from scratch induces the first contracting parties to implement the monopoly prices and might enable them to capture the maximized industry profit. A slotting fee, an up-front fee paid by the manufacturer to the first retailer, and a menu of tariff-quantity pairs are sufficient contracts to implement the monopoly outcome. These results do not depend on the type of retail competition, the level of differentiation between the retailers, the order of sequential negotiations, the level of asymmetry between the retailers in terms of their bargaining power vis-à-vis the manufacturer or their profitability in exclusive dealing.

 


View all ESMT Working Papers in the ESMT Working Paper Series here. ESMT Working Papers are also available via SSRN, RePEc, EconStor, and the German National Library (DNB).

Pages
36
ISSN (Print)
1866–3494
ESMT Working Paper

Merger efficiency and welfare implications of buyer power

ESMT Working Paper No. 11-07
Özlem Bedre-Defolie, Stéphane Caprice (2011)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
buyer mergers, non-linear supply contracts, merger efficiencies, size discounts, waterbed effects
JEL Code(s)
D43, K21, L42
This paper analyzes the welfare implications of buyer mergers, which are mergers between downstream firms from different markets. We focus on the interaction between the merger's effects on downstream efficiency and on buyer power in a setup where one manufacturer with a non-linear cost function sells to two locally competitive retail markets. We show that size discounts for the merged entity has no impact on consumer prices or on smaller retailers, unless the merger affects the downstream efficiency of the merging parties. When the upstream cost function is convex, we find that there are "waterbed effects," that is, each small retailer pays a higher average tariff if a buyer merger improves downstream efficiency. We obtain the opposite results, "anti-waterbed effects," if the merger is inefficient. When the cost function is concave, there are only anti-waterbed effects. In each retail market, the merger decreases the final price if and only if it improves the efficiency of the merging parties, regardless of its impact on the average tariff of small retailers.

 

View all ESMT Working Papers in the ESMT Working Paper Series here. ESMT Working Papers are also available via SSRN, RePEc, EconStor, and the German National Library (DNB).

Pages
26
ISSN (Print)
1866–3494