Employees donate more to their CEOs' preferred political candidates
Do you feel coerced by your CEO into making political choices on election day that you would not make otherwise? It's not uncommon for chief executive officers to affect how their employees vote.
Is the media partly to blame for the CEO gender gap?
The press predominantly criticizes the choice to hire female CEOs, point fingers at them when there's a crisis, and report on their personal life.
Headwinds for the next president
Dennis Hoffman, speaking at the Economic Club of Phoenix first monthly luncheon of the 2016-2017 season, said the headwinds for the next president: Aging baby boomers are one cause for the declining labor force participation rates.
Lessons for the U.S. from Canadian reforms
For the first monthly Economic Club of Phoenix luncheon of the 2016-2017 season, the keynote speaker was Jason Clemens, executive vice president of the Fraser Institute. He shared about Canada's pre-reform days and its 1990s era of restructuring, as well as the country's reform results.
Thirteen signs that someone is about to quit, according to research
Professor of Management Peter Hom and his research partner co-wrote this Harvard Business Review article about their research on resignation signals.
Americans work 25 percent more than Europeans, study finds
A Bloomberg article references to research that paints an exhausting picture of work in the U.S. — longer days, less vacation time, and later retirement.
ASU team first to prove Uber eases traffic congestion
ASU Information Systems Department researchers find ride-sharing service saves travel time and gas.
Whom to vote for? Employees tend to follow their leader
Does your CEO influence your political views? You may be surprised by the staggering and perhaps alarming research findings.
Clawback provisions: Research shows the claws are not always sharp
In a USA Today article, Associate Professor of Finance Ilona Babenko reported on her research of 272 companies with clawback provisions.
Post-crisis regulations and corporate bond markets
Many believe liquidity — the ease and cost-efficiency with which investors can buy or sell bonds — isn’t what it was before the recession. Hank Bessembinder, professor of finance at the W. P.