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Institution

Stockholm School of Economics

EducationStockholm, Sweden
About: Stockholm School of Economics is a education organization based out in Stockholm, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cost effectiveness. The organization has 1186 authors who have published 4891 publications receiving 285543 citations. The organization is also known as: Stockholm Business School & Handelshögskolan i Stockholm.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define market innovation as "changing existing market structure, introducing new market devices, altering market behavior, and reconstituting market agents." Market innovation means altering the way in which business is done.

118 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper shows that QALYs can be derived from more elementary conditions than thought hitherto in the literature: it suffices to impose risk neutrality for life years in every health state and the axiomatization greatly facilitates the assessment of the normative (non)validity of QALys in medical decision making.
Abstract: This paper shows that QALYs can be derived from more elementary conditions than thought hitherto in the literature: it suffices to impose risk neutrality for life years in every health state. This derivation of QALYs is appealing because it does not require knowledge of concepts from utility theory such as utility independence. Therefore our axiomatization greatly facilitates the assessment of the normative (non)validity of QALYs in medical decision making. Moreover, risk neutrality can easily be tested in experimental designs, which makes it straightforward to assess the descriptive (non)validity of QALYs.

118 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore which borrowers are able to benefit from foreign bank presence in emerging markets and find that the limits to financial integration are less tight than the static picture of firm-bank relationships implies.

118 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the impact of the deregulation of the Swedish banking industry in the mid-1980s, and the consequent banking crisis, on productive efficiency and productivity growth in the industry is analyzed.
Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to analyse the impact of the deregulation of the Swedish banking industry in the mid-1980s, and the consequent banking crisis, on productive efficiency and productivity growth in the industry. An unbalanced panel of Swedish banks is studied over the period, 1984 to 1995. A total of 1275 observations are analysed for 156 banks that were observed for between two and twelve years. We adopt a translog stochastic frontier model to estimate the labour-use requirements in terms of the variables, loans, deposits, guarantees, number of branches and total inventories, together with the year of observation. The inefficiency effects in the labour-use frontier are modelled in terms of the number of branches, total inventories, the type of bank and year of observation. The technical inefficiencies of labour use of Swedish banks were found to be significant, with mean inefficiencies per year estimated to be between about 8 and 15 per cent over the years of study. However, the confidence interval predictions for these inefficiencies were found to be quite wide.

118 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of multimarket contact on firms' ability to collude were investigated and shown to facilitate cooperation in super games other than oligopolies as long as agents' objective function is submodular in material payoffs.
Abstract: Following Bernheim and Whinston (1990), this paper addresses the effects of multimarket contact on firms' ability to collude. Real world imperfections tend to make firms' objective function strictly concave and market supergames "interdependent": firms' payoffs in each market depend on how they are doing in others. Then, multimarket contact always facilitates collusion. It may even make it sustainable in all markets when otherwise it would not be sustainable in any. The effects of conglomeration are discussed. "Multi-game contact" is shown to facilitate cooperation in supergames other than oligopolies as long as agents' objective function is submodular in material payoffs.

118 citations


Authors

Showing all 1218 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Magnus Johannesson10234240776
Thomas J. Sargent9637039224
Bengt Jönsson8136533623
J. Scott Armstrong7644533552
Johan Wiklund7428830038
Per Davidsson7130932262
Julian Birkinshaw6423329262
Timo Teräsvirta6222420403
Lars E.O. Svensson6118820666
Jonathan D. Ostry5923211776
Alexander Ljungqvist5913914466
Richard Green5846814244
Bo Jönsson5729411984
Magnus Henrekson5626113346
Assar Lindbeck5423413761
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20237
202251
2021247
2020219
2019186
2018168