Publications des institutions partenaires

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Transfer of Human Resource Management Practices within US Multinational Companies: a 3 country case study

This thesis addresses the topic of influencing factors on the transfer of Human Resource Management (HRM) practices in Multinational Corporations (MNCs), a topic embedded in International Business (IB) and more precise in International Human Resource Management (IHRM). It builds on the debate of international dominance, transfer motives, and the different viewpoints on the triggers,…

Institution partenaire

Université de Fribourg

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English / 21/12/2016

The Purchasing of Business Services - Performance Excellence Study 2016

The following study reveals some comprehensive details and increases the transparency concerning the acquisition of business services. Especially for the DACH region, valuable and first of their kind insights are revealed. Altogether, ten major areas are addressed and analysed, focusing on a comparison with goods purchasing and typical procedures that are applied within professional…

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English / 19/12/2016

Locating Ordonomics

Ingo Pies (2016b) provides an engaging review of our article “Locating Responsibility” (see Kolmar/Beschorner 2016), published in one of the past issues of the zfwu. In his thoughtful comments, he discusses our suggestion of a multi-level approach in economic ethics against the background of his own ideas of “ordonomics”, which is an alternative conceptual framework that allows to…

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English / 15/12/2016

Business model innovation: : a theoretical perspective applied to training

Since the mid 90’s, the business model concept has gained prominence as a unit of analysis in innovation studies. A growing consensus among scholars reveals that business model innovation is key to firm performance, which has brought scholars researching business model to focus on issues related to business model renewal and innovation in incumbent firms (e.g.…

Institution partenaire

Haute Ecole de Gestion de Genève

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English / 13/12/2016

Business model innovation: a theoretical perspective applied to training

Since the mid 90’s, the business model concept has gained prominence as a unit of analysis in innovation studies. A growing consensus among scholars reveals that business model innovation is key to firm performance, which has brought scholars researching business model to focus on issues related to business model renewal and innovation in incumbent firms (e.g.…

Institution partenaire

Haute Ecole de Gestion de Genève

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English / 13/12/2016

Funding shocks and banks' credit reallocation

This paper provides evidence on the strategic lending decisions made by banks facing a negative funding shock. Using bank-firm level credit data, we show that banks reallocate credit within their domestic loan portfolio in at least three different ways. First, banks reallocate to sectors where they have high sector presence. Second, they also reallocate to sectors in which they are…

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English / 06/12/2016

Dynamical representation of dominance relationships in the human rostromedial prefrontal cortex

Humans and other primates have evolved the ability to represent their status in the group's social hierarchy, which is essential for avoiding harm and accessing resources. Yet it remains unclear how the human brain learns dominance status and adjusts behavior accordingly during dynamic social interactions. Here we address this issue with a combination of fMRI and transcranial…

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English / 05/12/2016

Gender bias and credit access

We extract an exogenous measure of gender bias from survey responses by descendants of U.S. immigrants on questions about the role of women in society. We then use data on around 6,000 small business firms from 17 countries and find that in high-gender-bias countries, female entrepreneurs are more likely to opt out of the loan application process and to resort to informal finance,…

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English / 01/12/2016

Unique equilibrium in contests with incomplete information

Considered are imperfectly discriminating contests in which players may possess private information about the primitives of the confiict, such as the contest technology, valuations of the prize, cost functions, and budget constraints. We find general conditions under which a given contest of this sort admits a unique pure-strategy Nash equilibrium. In particular, provided that all…

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English / 01/12/2016

The youngest get the pill: ADHD misdiagnosis in Germany, its regional correlates and international comparison

Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a leading diagnosed health condition among children in many developed countries but the causes underlying these high levels of ADHD remain highly controversial. Recent research for the U.S., Canada and some European countries shows that children who enter school relatively young have higher ADHD rates than their older peers,…

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English / 01/12/2016

Fictitious play in networks

This paper studies fictitious play in networks of noncooperative two-player games. We show that continuous-time fictitious play converges to Nash equilibrium provided that the overall game is zero-sum. Moreover, the rate of convergence is 1/T , regardless of the size of the network. In contrast, arbitrary n-player zero-sum games do not possess the fictitious-play property. As an…

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English / 01/12/2016

Aggregate fluctuations in adaptive production networks

We study production networks where firms’ products can be described by a set of input and output characteristics, and links are formed only if the output characteristics of a seller match the input characteristics of a customer. We introduce a fully endogenous network formation model with monopolistically competitive firms, in which firms exit due to exogenous shocks, or the…

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English / 01/12/2016

Time vs. state in insurance: experimental evidence from contract farming in Kenya

The gains from insurance arise from the transfer of income across states. Yet, by requiring that the premium be paid upfront, standard insurance products also transfer income across time. We show that this intertemporal transfer can help explain low insurance demand, especially among the poor, and in a randomized control trial in Kenya we test a crop insurance product which removes…

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English / 01/12/2016

The economics of peace: can “Swiss” institutions do the job?

In the 5th edition of the UBS Center Public Paper Series, Dominic Rohner shows how conflict-torn countries can escape the vicious cycle of war and destruction. Much of the economics and political science literature on wars and conflict has focused on things that are hard for policymakers to change (natural resources, ethnic composition, and weather shocks). While this paper also…

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English / 01/12/2016

The slippery slope of dishonesty

Recent experiments suggest that dishonesty can escalate from small levels to ever-larger ones along a 'slippery slope'. Activity in bilateral amygdala tracks this gradual adaptation to repeated acts of self-serving dishonesty.

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English / 01/12/2016

Career change: The Role of Transition Narratives in Alternative Identity Constructions

This chapter addresses the question of why some people may be more successful than others at creating an alternative identity in the course of a career change. Taking a narrative perspective, the author draws particular attention to a variety of transition narratives which function as legitimizing resources for people to distance
themselves from previous self-concepts, while at…

English / 01/12/2016

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