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Institution

HEC Paris

EducationJouy-en-Josas, France
About: HEC Paris is a education organization based out in Jouy-en-Josas, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Investment (macroeconomics) & Market liquidity. The organization has 584 authors who have published 2756 publications receiving 104467 citations. The organization is also known as: Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales & HEC School of Management Paris.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare and contrast between traditional ordinary least squares regression models that have been used in the extant literature with latent class analysis, finding that the presence of three distinct groups of employees suggests the heterogeneity present in the data.
Abstract: Employee turnover remains to be one of the biggest human resource problems facing the Indian international call center industry. This paper aims to provide a comprehensive study of how the attitudes of call center employees toward different aspects of their work affect their intention to leave. Our specific contribution to the literature is in understanding the heterogeneity among employees and how this affects meaningful inference in studying employees' intention to leave. To achieve this goal, we compare and contrast between traditional ordinary least squares regression models that have been used in the extant literature with latent class analysis. Latent class analysis suggests the presence of three distinct groups of employees, thus confirming the heterogeneity present in the data. The three groups can be represented as the two polar groups, one keen on staying and the other keen on leaving, and a significantly large third group of employees who are unsure. We also find that the impact of different at...

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze noncooperative collusion in an infinitely repeated Bertrand game, where each of the n firms receives a privately observed, i.i.d cost shock in each period and firms only observe whether they have "won" the unit mass of consumers.
Abstract: We analyze noncooperative collusion in an infinitely repeated Bertrand game, where each of the n firms receives a privately observed, iid cost shock in each period and firms only (and privately) observe whether they have “won” the unit mass of consumers No other information is available and no communication is allowed We prove that there exist equilibria in private strategies approximating first-best profits when firms are sufficiently patient In particular, productive efficiency obtains in the limit

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 2006
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze the handling of strategic management accounting in 20 general management accounting textbooks that are perceived as most important in German and in English-speaking countries, and they find that the concepts of management accounting are not integrated into textbooks within a coherent, consistent framework.
Abstract: We analyze the handling of strategic management accounting in the 20 general management accounting textbooks that are perceived as most important in German- and in English-speaking countries. Our analysis shows that strategic management accounting is not integrated into textbooks within a coherent, consistent framework. However, the survey also shows that these textbooks often use several strategic management accounting “subconcepts” which form a set of core concepts of strategic management accounting across the language areas. We identify these core concepts and elaborate on striking differences between the coverage of certain concepts in the German- and English-speaking worlds. In general, the German term “controlling” implies a more strategic emphasis than does its American counterpart, “management accounting”.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors trace the historical deployment of transparency and the associated assemblages of actors and technologies in transnational economic and market governance, and elaborate on the implications of this transformation for the political economy of accounting, by reflecting on how the reliance on standardised transparency in neoliberal governmentality has been about: a reconfiguration of the sites of problems (focused on the national level) and solutions (focalised at the global), a liquidation of transnational market governance.
Abstract: Mobilising the literature on global governance, governmentality and accounting regulation, we trace the historical deployment of transparency and the associated assemblages of actors and technologies in transnational economic and market governance. Starting with the first uses of the term “transparency” in the European Common Market (ECM) after World War II, we show how transparency came to inform and frame the imagined rational individual as the central economic (customer, central to price discovery) and later political (citizen, central to the market's public accountability) participant. We then show how in the 1990s, with the rise of the New Financial Architecture (NFA), the role of transparency in economic/market governance was fundamentally transformed. Beginning with their good governance programs, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank gradually adopted “standardised transparency” (in the form of financial accounting, as well as standardised statistics, state budgets, corporate governance, etc.) to govern market participants through financial market discipline. This disciplining program worked in concert with a program of moral persuasion enacted through an intensifying performance measurement apparatus. We elaborate on the implications of this transformation for the political economy of accounting, by reflecting on how the reliance on standardised transparency in neoliberal governmentality has been about: a reconfiguration of the sites of problems (focused on the national level) and solutions (focalised at the global), a liquidation of transnational market governance (that is increased reach, flexiblisation and self-organisation of both the disciplining and moralising/subjectivising governance processes), and a reconfiguration of the topology of actorhood (away from states and individuals both as enablers and beneficiaries, and towards financial investors and private standard bodies).

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze the factors that influence the support for environmental policy proposals and find that yes-votes do not seem to depend on whether a proposal involves a tax or not.
Abstract: We analyze the factors that influence the support for environmental policy proposals. Swiss referendum data show that proposals obtain more yes-votes if they do not restrict consumption possibilities directly, if they are endorsed by business associations, if environmental preferences are strong and economic conditions are favorable at the time of the referendum. Also, there are more pro-environmental votes in cantons with higher population density. On the other hand, yes-votes do not seem to depend on whether a proposal involves a tax or not.

33 citations


Authors

Showing all 605 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Sandor Czellar133126391049
Jean-Yves Reginster110119558146
Pierre Hansen7857532505
Gilles Laurent7726427052
Olivier Bruyère7257924788
David Dubois5016912396
Rodolphe Durand4917310075
Itzhak Gilboa4925913352
Yves Dallery471706373
Duc Khuong Nguyen472358639
Eric Jondeau451557088
Jean-Noël Kapferer4515112264
David Thesmar411617242
Bruno Biais411448936
Barbara B. Stern40896001
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20239
202233
2021129
2020141
2019110
2018136