Unfair Prestige, DePaul’s Master of Science in Taxation is Honored, and More – Chicago News
Let’s explore some of the most interesting stories that have emerged from Chicago business schools this week.
Juries Treat Prestigious Companies Differently in Employment Discrimination Suits – Kellogg Insight
New research from Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management professor of management and organizations Brayden King finds that organizations are often treated very differently when it comes to certain lawsuits, often depending upon the prestige of the company
“Prestige is harmful to organizations in that it draws attention to their potential hypocrisy. These companies are supposed to be standout examples of virtue in their industries or examples of how companies should behave. It makes them high-profile targets,” King writes. However, there are plenty of benefits to the prestigious title, much of which may be considered unfair.
When it comes to business, wrongfulness isn’t often attributed to the same company, even in the case of repeat offenses. Working with Mary-Hunter McDonnell, Kellogg Ph.D. graduate, the research found that “juries don’t make the same character attributions to chronically deviant organizations. They think about organizations differently.”
You can read more about the research here.
Employers Rank DePaul MS in Taxation Highly – Kellstadt News and Events
For the second consecutive year, TaxTalent has ranked DePaul’s Master of Science in Taxation degree third overall as part of its 2018 Top in Tax Educational Survey. MST assistant director Diane Kuhlmann believes that what sets DePaul’s degree apart from the pack is its combination of theoretical and practical pedagogy. Alumnus Ben Ulman ’17 raved about his experiences as part the MST program:
“The program has given me a pretty wide tax skillset. Tax is ever-changing and the program taught me what is current with laws and regulations. The best part of the program for me was the professors’ knowledge of taxation and the network you build from class.”
Learn more about DePaul’s MST degree here.
Making Financial Decisions: The Endowment Effect – MD Mag
Famed Chicago Booth professor Richard Thaler, the winner of the 2017 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his esteemed work in behavioral economics, explained in his 1991 research “The Endowment Effect, Loss Aversion, and Status Quo Bias” (alongside Daniel Kahneman and Jack L. Knetsch) about the particular habits consumers have when valuing their own items. Simply put, if you own something, you tend to put a higher value on in than if you don’t.
This internal methodology often finds itself in daily financial situations, such as buying or selling a house, according to Shirley M. Mueller, MD.
“Although economists originally hypothesized that the endowment effect occurred because humans are loss-averse, new evidence suggests there is an additional reason under specific circumstances. We identify with something that is ours.”
Read more about the endowment effort phenomena and a unique student experiment here.
Leavey Prof Looks Back At Role, Helping Nobel Prize Winner Richard Thaler
In the wake of famed economist Richard Thaler recently winning the Nobel Prize, the SCU Leavey School of Business looked deeper into SCU’s historical role in the development of the behavioral economics field.
Continue reading…
Chicago Booth Professor Richard Thaler Takes Home Nobel Prize in Economics
A professor from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business has won top honors in the field of economics. According to a press release, Richard Thaler was awarded the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2017. Continue reading…
UCLA Anderson Professor Published In Wall Street Journal
Shlomo Benartzi, a professor at UCLA’s Anderson School of Management, recently wrote a piece for the European edition of The Wall Street Journal that explained a phenomenon called “narrow framing,” which often prevents investors from attaining success.
Booth Professor Releases New Book
Richard Thaler, professor of behavioral science and economics at the Booth School of Business, has spent extensive time exploring the notion that the central agents in the economy are “fallible, error-prone humans” and not the “rational actors assumed in traditional economics.” Thaler, who is considered a founder in the field of behavioral economics, is now releasing a new book on May 18, 2015 that further examines why people love to misbehave in ways that effect the economy so much. Continue reading…