Institution
Stockholm School of Economics
Education•Stockholm, 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 published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The majority of firms traded in the World's three largest stock exchanges (London, New York, and Tokyo) follow the one share/one vote principle as mentioned in this paper, however, in other countries, dual classes of shares are common place.
Abstract: The majority of firms traded in the World's three largest stock exchanges (London, New York, and Tokyo) follow the one share/one vote principle. However, in other countries, dual classes of shares are common place. For example, 50 percent of the publicly-traded Dutch firms have non-voting equity, and approximately 75 percent of the publicly-traded Danish, Finnish, and Swedish firms have shares that differ in their voting rights. This paper reviews the arguments as to why firms create dual classes of shares, their effect on firm value, and the relative prices of shares that differ only in their voting rights. Copyright 1992 by Oxford University Press.
79 citations
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TL;DR: This article studied the effect of political polarization on government consumption and redistribution using the dispersion of self-reported political preferences as a measure of polarization and found that politically polarized countries have lower levels of redistribution and government consumption.
Abstract: We study the effect of political polarization on government consumption and redistribution using the dispersion of self-reported political preferences as our measure of polarization. Politically polarized countries have lower levels of redistribution and government consumption. The relationship between political polarization and the size of government is stronger in more democratic countries. The results are robust to a large set of control variables, including GDP per capita and income inequality.
79 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors exploit the fact that banking institutions may hold their own shares in trust to construct a clean measure of the wedge between inside voting control and cash flow rights.
79 citations
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INSEAD1, University of Padua2, University of Groningen3, University of Washington4, University of Manitoba5, University of Chicago6, University of Michigan7, Harvard University8, Yale University9, University of Missouri10, Erasmus University Rotterdam11, University of Amsterdam12, Catholic University of Portugal13, Macau University of Science and Technology14, Roosevelt University15, IE University16, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign17, Illinois Institute of Technology18, University of California, Irvine19, University of South Florida20, Mathematica Policy Research21, University of Massachusetts Amherst22, University of Hong Kong23, Michigan State University24, American University25, Northwestern University26, University of Southern California27, Monash University28, University of Cologne29, University of Illinois at Chicago30, University of Toronto31, University of Paris32, New York University33, University of St. Thomas (Minnesota)34, Beijing Normal University35, Stockholm School of Economics36
TL;DR: The Pre-Publication Independent Replication (PPIR) project as discussed by the authors is a collaborative approach to improving the reproducibility of scientific research, in which findings are replicated in qualified independent laboratories before (rather than after) they are published.
79 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors test the consumer-perceived value of non-traditional media, and the moderating effects of brand reputation, appropriateness and expense, and find that the effects are greater for low-than-high-reputation brands.
Abstract: Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to test the consumer‐perceived value of non‐traditional media, and the moderating effects of brand reputation, appropriateness and expense.Design/methodology/approach – The approach takes the form of an experimental study of six (real) campaigns, manipulating media type and brand reputation (with appropriateness and expense measured within subjects).Findings – Non‐traditional media enhance consumer‐perceived value. The effects are greater for low‐ than for high‐reputation brands. High‐reputation brands are more sensitive to the appropriateness and expense of the marketing. Consumer‐perceived value leads to higher purchase and word‐of‐mouth intentions.Research limitations/implications – The analysis of the mediating effects of consumer‐perceived value is exploratory and requires follow‐up. Being a first test of the effects of non‐traditional media, no discrimination was made between different types. This requires further attention.Practical implications – The paper sh...
79 citations
Authors
Showing all 1218 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Magnus Johannesson | 102 | 342 | 40776 |
Thomas J. Sargent | 96 | 370 | 39224 |
Bengt Jönsson | 81 | 365 | 33623 |
J. Scott Armstrong | 76 | 445 | 33552 |
Johan Wiklund | 74 | 288 | 30038 |
Per Davidsson | 71 | 309 | 32262 |
Julian Birkinshaw | 64 | 233 | 29262 |
Timo Teräsvirta | 62 | 224 | 20403 |
Lars E.O. Svensson | 61 | 188 | 20666 |
Jonathan D. Ostry | 59 | 232 | 11776 |
Alexander Ljungqvist | 59 | 139 | 14466 |
Richard Green | 58 | 468 | 14244 |
Bo Jönsson | 57 | 294 | 11984 |
Magnus Henrekson | 56 | 261 | 13346 |
Assar Lindbeck | 54 | 234 | 13761 |