Suchergebnisse
Filter
101 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
SSRN
Working paper
The SEC's Short-Sale Experiment: Evidence on Causal Channels and Reassessment of Indirect Effects
In: Northwestern Law & Econ Research Paper 20-06
SSRN
Working paper
Online Appendix for Black, de Carvalho, Kim, and Yurtoglu 'How Useful are Commercial Corporate Governance Ratings? Evidence from Emerging Markets'
In: Black, De Carvalho, Kim, and Yurtoglu, How Useful are Commercial Corporate Governance Ratings: Evidence from Emerging Markets?; Journal of Corporate Finance, Forthcoming
SSRN
How Useful are Commercial Corporate Governance Ratings in Emerging Markets?
In: European Corporate Governance Institute – Finance Working Paper No. 812/2022
SSRN
Corporate governance indices and construct validity
In: Corporate governance: an international review, Band 25, Heft 6, S. 397-410
ISSN: 1467-8683
AbstractManuscript TypeConceptual and empirical.Research Question/IssueMany studies of firm‐level corporate governance rely on aggregate "indices" to measure underlying, unobserved governance. But we are not confident that we know how to build these indices. Often we are unsure both as to what is "good" governance, and how one can proxy for this vague concept using observable measures. We conduct an exploratory analysis of how researchers can address the "construct validity" of firm‐level governance indices, which poses a major challenge to all studies that rely on these indices.Research Findings/InsightsWe assess the construct validity of governance indices for four major emerging markets (Brazil, India, Korea, and Turkey), developed in prior work. In that work, we built country‐specific indices, using country‐specific governance elements that reflect local norms, institutions, and data availability, and showed that these indices predict firm market value in each country. The use of country‐specific indices puts great stress on the construct validity challenge of assessing how well a governance measure matches the underlying concept. We address here how well these four country‐specific indices, and subindices for aspects of governance such as board structure or disclosure, coherently measure unobserved, underlying actual governance.Theoretical/Academic ImplicationsWe provide guidance on how researchers can address the construct validity of corporate governance indices.Practitioner/Policy ImplicationsThe uncertain construct validity of most corporate governance indices suggests caution in relying on research using these indices as a basis for firm‐level governance changes, or country‐level legal reforms.
Malpractice Payouts and Malpractice Insurance: Evidence from Texas Closed Claims, 1990–2003
In: The Geneva papers on risk and insurance - issues and practice, Band 33, Heft 2, S. 177-192
ISSN: 1468-0440
Measuring Maternal Mortality and Mortality Disparities: A Health-Adjusted Approach
In: Northwestern Law & Econ Research Paper No. 24-21
SSRN
Online Appendix for Addressing Disparities in Maternal Mortality: Redefining the Problem
SSRN
Effect of Financial Incentives on Hospital-Cardiologist Integration and Cardiac Test Location
In: 20 Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 570 (2023)
SSRN
The Disappearing COVID-naïve population and Comparative Roche vs. Abbott Test Sensitivity: Evidence from antibody seroprevalence in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
In: Northwestern Law & Econ Research Paper No. 24-04
SSRN
Effects of Short-Term Air Pollution Exposure on U.S. COVID-19 Mortality
In: Northwestern Law & Econ Research Paper No. 22-03
SSRN
Online Appendix for Effects of Short-Term Air Pollution Exposure on U.S. COVID-19 Mortality
SSRN
Online Appendix: Which Aspects of Corporate Governance Do and Do Not Matter in Emerging Markets
SSRN
Working paper
Community Focus Groups About a COVID-19 Individual Risk Assessment Tool: Access, Understanding, and Usefulness
SSRN
The COVID-19 Pandemic, Years of Life Lost, and Life Expectancy: Decomposition Using Individual-Level Mortality Data
In: Northwestern Law & Econ Research Paper No. 22-01
SSRN