The Latest

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Economics

Is Stakeholder Capitalism Really Making a Comback?

We will have to wait and see whether the US Business Roundtable's recent statement renouncing corporate governance based on shareholder primacy is merely a publicity stunt. If America's most powerful CEOs really mean what they say, they will support sweeping legislative reforms.

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Finance

Disciplining Banks for the Next Economic Downturn

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Operations

Millennials Spur a Management Revolution

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As Department Stores Struggle, Nordstrom Makes a Play in New York City

Real Estate Brokers Are Still Seeking Hefty Fees from NYC Tenants, Despite State Ban

A top Wall Street researcher found the ideal team size for a money manager to beat the market

Meet Our Faculty

Columbia Business School professors care deeply about teaching and interacting with students. The faculty are world-renowned practitioners and researchers who use their experience to bring to life leadership lessons and challenges as they orchestrate a case discussion.

Professors invest in becoming great teachers with extensive training, feedback on their teaching, and resources from the Center for Teaching and Learning. In fact, teaching is so critical at Columbia Business School that it is a core part of the tenure process.

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Bruce Kogut

Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. Professor of Leadership and Ethics, Management Division

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Bruce Usher

Co-Director, Tamer Center for Social Enterprise, Tamer Center for Social Enterprise Professor of Professional Practice

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Gita Johar

Vice Dean for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, Dean's Office Meyer Feldberg Professor of Business, Marketing Division

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Michel Tuan Pham

Kravis Professor of Business, Marketing Division

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Ann Bartel

Chair, Economics Division Merrill Lynch Professor of Workforce Transformation, Economics Division

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Santiago Balseiro

Associate Professor of Business, Decision, Risk, and Operations Division

Areas of Expertise

Consulting

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Is Stakeholder Capitalism Making a Comeback?

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Economics

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Is Stakeholder Capitalism Making a Comeback?

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Entrepreneurship

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Is Stakeholder Capitalism Making a Comeback?

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Ethics

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Is Stakeholder Capitalism Making a Comeback?

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Family-Owned Business

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Is Stakeholder Capitalism Making a Comeback?

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Industry

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Is Stakeholder Capitalism Making a Comeback?

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Innovation & Technology

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Is Stakeholder Capitalism Making a Comeback?

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Marketing

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Is Stakeholder Capitalism Making a Comeback?

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Contact Us

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Office Hours:

Our Admissions Office is located in 216 Uris Hall on Columbia University’s Morningside Heights Campus. Prospective students are welcome to drop by to speak with an admissions counselor from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.

Email:

Email: apply@gsb.columbia.edu

Call:

Tel. 1 (212) 567-8912

Latest Research

Should Hospitals Keep Their Patients Longer? The Role of Inpatient Care in Reducing Post-Discharge Mortality

Authors
Bartel, Ann, Carri Chan, and Song-Hee Kim.
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Article
Journal
Management Science
1 / 3

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and the National Quality Forum have endorsed 30-day mortality rates as important indicators of hospital quality. Concerns have been raised, however, as to whether post-discharge mortality rates are reasonable measures of hospital quality as they consider the frequency of an event that occurs after a patient is discharged and no longer under the watch and care of the hospital. Using a large dataset comprised of all hospital encounters of every Medicare patient from 2000 to 2011 and an instrumental variables methodology to address the potential endogeneity bias in hospital length-of-stay, we find evidence that 30-day mortality rates are appropriate measures of hospital […]

Lean Operations: From Efficiency to Profit Coauthor(s): Omar Besbes, Trevor Harris, Marcelo Olivares, Gabriel Weintraub

Authors
Bartel, Ann, Carri Chan, and Song-Hee Kim.
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Article
Journal
Management Science
2 / 3

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B8215-001: Economics of Organizational Strategy

Authors
Bartel, Ann, Carri Chan, and Song-Hee Kim.
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Article
Journal
Management Science
3 / 3

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and the National Quality Forum have endorsed 30-day mortality rates as important indicators of hospital quality. Concerns have been raised, however, as to whether post-discharge mortality rates are reasonable measures of hospital quality as they consider the frequency of an event that occurs after a patient is discharged and no longer under the watch and care of the hospital. Using a large dataset comprised of all hospital encounters of every Medicare patient from 2000 to 2011 and an instrumental variables methodology to address the potential endogeneity bias in hospital length-of-stay, we find evidence that 30-day mortality rates are appropriate measures of hospital […]

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