Working Papers

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SSRN Research Paper Series

The Social Science Research Network’s Research Paper Series includes working papers produced by Stanford GSB the Rock Center.

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The Time Variation of Risk and Return in Foreign Exchange Markets: A General Equilibrium Perspective

Geert Bekaert
1993

This paper investigates the statistical properties of high frequency nominal exchange rates and forward premiums in the context of a dynamic two-country general equilibrium model. Primary focus is on the persistence, variability, leptokurtosis…

A Theory of Collective Choice for Government Programs

David P. Baron
1993

A limitation of the collective choice approach to the study of resource allocation through political institutions is the absence of a method capable of providing predictions of behavior and outcomes over a range of choice problems. The prevailing…

A Theory of Divided and Unified Government

Keith Krehbiel
1993

A spatial theory of unified and divided government yields comparative statements about gridlock—the tendency of policies to remain unchanged in specified governmental and partisan regimes. An application of the theory to recent political history…

U.S. Equity Investment in Emerging Stock Markets

Linda Tesar, Ingrid Werner
1993

This paper examines U.S. equity flows to emerging stock markets in the 1978.1-1991.3 period. We draw four main conclusions from this analysis. First, despite the recent increase in U.S. equity investment in emerging stock markets, the U.S.…

Understanding the Political Dynamics of Developing New Products

Beth A Benjamin
1993

A qualitative inductive field study of a market-driven development effort is used to generate a model of political influence in new product development. The data indicate susceptible to political activity. These contexts are shaped by the joint…

What We Theorize When We Theorize That We Theorize: The 'Lay Theory' Construct in Developmental, Social, and Cultural Psychology

Daniel R. Ames, Eric D. Knowles, Michael W. Morris
1993

This chapter integrates research in several academic disciplines on the lay theories that people rely on when making sense of their social environments. First, drawing on philosophy of science, we establish several criteria for a theory and…

An Approach to Single Parameter Process Design

Xavier de Groote, Evan L. Porteus
1992

We analyze single parameter process design problems that typically entail minimizing the sum of convex and concave functions. We transform such problems into a tractable form, and obtain sharp characterizations of the original problem. Solution…

An Empirical Assessment of Voluntary Disclosure Theory

Mark Lang, Russell Lundholm
1992

In this paper we examine the determinants of a firm’s level of voluntary disclosure. As a comprehensive measure of a firm’s disclosure level, we use analysts’ evaluations of firms’ disclosures as reported in the Financial Analysts Federation…

Arbitrage, Nontrading, and Stale Prices:

1992

This paper explains a puzzle created by the S&P 500 cash and futures prices during the crash of October 1987. The cash index appears to be a moving average of the futures, but nontrading in constituent stocks explains only the initial period…

Benefits of Narrow Business Strategies

Garth Saloner, Julio Rotemberg
1992

Firms often concentrate on a narrow range of activities and claim to forego other, apparently profitable, opportunities. This pursuit of narrow strategies is applauded by some academics who study strategic management. We present two related…

Characterization of Solution Concepts in Standard Evolutionary Games

Jonathan Bendor (1950–2025), Piotr Swistak
1992

In this paper we prove that any strategy in any evolutionary game may result in four different types of evolutionary stability. We formulate and prove necessary and sufficient conditions for all four types of stability. We argue that only two of…

Comparing Equilibria

Paul R. Milgrom, John Roberts (1945–2026)
1992

We develop an ordinal approach to comparing the equilibria of economic models. The main advantages of this approach, compared to the traditional approach based on signing derivatives, are that (1) it utilizes only a subset of the assumptions…

Competitive Political Action and Policy Neutrality

Susanne Lohmann
1992

This paper develops a signaling theory of competitive political action. Despite the free rider problem associated with mass political participation, rational and self-interested individuals may take costly political action to inform or manipulate…

Condorcet Dynamics

Jonathan Bendor (1950–2025)
1992

The Condorcet Jury Theorem has classically presumed a static context: the decision making group faces a fixed set of alternatives, compares the options in a pairwise fashion, and the process ends when the group makes a final choice. This is a…

Contractual Arrangements in Franchising: An Empirical Investigation

Rajiv Lal, Deepak Agrawal
1992

In this paper we conduct an empirical investigation of the recent explanations offered for the nature of a franchising contract. In particular, we focus on the arguments posited by Lal (1990) where it is suggested that since both the franchisor’…

A Control Theory of Dynamic Capital Structure

Jeffrey Zwiebel
1992

This paper develops a model in which debt serves to constrain inefficient investments of empire building managers due to the consequent control implications of bankruptcy. Unlike related free cash flow models, capital structure is voluntarily…

Cooperation and Organizational Identification

Roderick M. Kramer
1992

Organizational theorists have long recognized the important role cooperation plays in organizations. However, current theories say little about the antecedents of cooperative behavior in organizations. In this chapter, I present a conceptual…

Corporate Conservatism, Herd Behavior and Relative Compensation

Jeffrey Zwiebel
1992

This paper demonstrates that in a simple setting with managerial concern for reputation and asymmetric information on ability, most managers may refrain from undertaking innovations which stochastically dominate an industry standard. Common…

A Cross-Sectional Analysis of the Theory of Corporate Disclosure Due to Adverse Selection

Russell Lundholm, Mark Lang
1992

In this paper we examine the determinants of firms’ level of voluntary disclosure. We use analysts’ published evaluations of firms’ disclosures as a comprehensive measure of disclosure level and use a model of discretionary disclosure to explain…

Delegation and the Regulation of Risk

Hugo Hopenhayn, Ingrid Werner
1992

It has been argued that U.S. regulatory agencies take an extreme and often inconsistent approach to the regulation of risk: they tend to overreact to dramatic, well-publicized accidents and disasters. The standard explanation invokes the…