Hukou Reform, Return Migration and lmplications for Urban Development in China
14:00-15:30
Talk & Lecture
1
2771332
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2023-06-09
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Speaker:ZHANG JipengVenue: School of Economics, Room 618Abstract: In recent years, China has made remarkable progress in Hukou reform. Based on government policy documents and our fieldwork, we construct a quantitative measure of Hukou registration barriers in Chinese cities. First-tier and some second-tier cities set high criteria for local Hukou registration that have become more stringent over time, while other cities have much lower requirements. Drawing on household survey data, we show that stricter Hukou restrictions lead to a sianificant increase in return migration, especially among those with rural Hukou, low education level, and poor health status. Finally, we estimate the effects of further loosening Hukou restrictions, finding that granting Hukou to migrants in lower-tier cities would increase educational attainment, but impose fiscal strains on top-tier cities.
Jipeng Zhang is a Professor of Economics and a Research Fellow of the lnstitute of State Governance at the Shandong University. His research interests are public economics, migration and urban development, with a focus on China’s public finance, Hukou reform, and poverty alleviation resettlement.
ZHANG Jipeng
2023-06-09 15:30:13
School of Economics, Room 618
Inventory Control and Learning for Fast-Fashion Industry with Censored Demand
15:30-17:00
Talk & Lecture
2
2770674
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2023-06-08
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Speaker: Prof.Mehmet Gumus,McGill UniversityVenue: SOM A523 meeting roomAbstract: Motivated by our collaboration with one of the largest fast-fashion retailers in Europe, we study a (in-season) inventory management problem for fast fashion industry when the demand distribution is unknown. This system has a central warehouse that receives an initial replenishment and distributes its inventory to multiple stores in each time period during a finite horizon. By observing the censored demand, the firm has to jointly learn the demand and make inventory control decisions on the fly. We first develop a learning algorithm based on empirical demand distribution and prove a worst-case bound on its theoretical performance when the demand information is uncensored. Then, in the censored demand case, we propose a more sophisticated algorithm based on a primal-dual learning and optimization approach. Result show that both algorithms have great theoretical and empiral performances.
Motivated by our collaboration with one of the largest fast-fashion retailers in Europe, we study a (in-season) inventory management problem for fast fashion industry when the demand distribution is unknown. This system has a central warehouse that receives an initial replenishment and distributes its inventory to multiple stores in each time period during a finite horizon.
Prof. Mehmet Gumus
2023-06-08 15:30:00
Online and Offline
How top management team state orientation influences corporate social performance
14:00-16:00
Talk & Lecture
3
2770221
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2023-06-07
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Speaker: Pro. H. Zhu (Arizona State University)Time: 14:00-16:00, June 8Venue: Conference Room 423, Building A, Building of School of Management, Zijingang CampusAbstract: Building upon social role theory and upper echelons theory, we seek to advance research on SOEs and strategic leadership by examining how major aspects of SOEs’ corporate social performance (CSP) are influenced by top management teams’ (TMT) state orientation, the degree to which top executives represent the government’s ideology in decision making. SOEs have grown in both number and size around the globe and their total assets are half of global GDP. Our theory explains why a stronger TMT state orientation leads to 1) better environmental performance, 2) better societal outcomes, captured by less corruption-related spending and more charitable donations, 3) higher employee compensation and lower intraorganizational pay dispersion, but 4) worse financial performance. Using an original set of unobtrusive indicators of TMT state orientation, we find support for our theoretical expectations after analyzing a large and longitudinal sample of public SOEs in China between 2003 and 2017. In explaining how TMT state orientation influences SOEs’ CSP, our study offers a theoretical explanation for the heterogeneity in the CSP of these organizations while significantly broadening the ambit of upper echelons research. Our study also contributes to upper echelons research by developing theory about how the governmental system and state ideology influence organizational outcomes through top managers.Keywords: Top Management Team, State Orientation, Socialist Ideology, Stakeholder Relations, Corporate Social Performance, State-owned Enterprises, ChinaSpeaker Profile: David H. Zhu is a Professor in Management and Entrepreneurship and Dean’s Council Distinguished Scholar at the Arizona State University. His research builds on behavioral theories to examine strategic decision making of top executives and entrepreneurs, innovation, corporate governance, digitalization, and corporate strategy. He also studies the structure of corporate elite networks and resource exchange networks. His work has been published in top scholarly journals, including Academy of Management Journal, Administrative Science Quarterly, Organization Science, and Strategic Management Journal, and has received several international awards from Academy of Management and Strategic Management Society. He is a Senior Editor of Organization Science and a Deputy Editor of Management and Organization Review. He also serves as the Vice President and Program Chair Elect of International Association for Chinese Management Research and the Chair of the Strategic Leadership and Governance group of Strategic Management Society. David is an experienced business educator and has taught and coached many top executives around the world. His research has been featured in Harvard Business Review, Wall Street Journal, Forbes, and BBC Future, among others.
David H. Zhu is a Professor in Management and Entrepreneurship and Dean’s Council Distinguished Scholar at the Arizona State University. His research builds on behavioral theories to examine strategic decision making of top executives and entrepreneurs, innovation, corporate governance, digitalization, and corporate strategy. He also studies the structure of corporate elite networks and resource exchange networks.
David H. Zhu
2023-06-08 14:00:00
Zijingang Campus
Financial Integration and Economic Growth: Directional Heterogeneity and Threshold Effects
10:00-11:30
Talk & Lecture
4
2769579
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2023-06-06
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Speaker: Yoonbai Kim, University of KentuckyVenue: Zijingang Campus, School of Economics, Room 530Abstract: Despite voluminous studies, the growth effects of international financial integration remain unresolved. Recent studies have shown that the effects depend on a wide variety of factors including the level of economic and financial development, the type of financial flows (debt or equity), the direction of flows (inflows or outflows), and the existence of the investment or saving constraint with the economy. In this paper, we implement a model that embodies double threshold effects where the thresholds are defined in terms of (i) per capita GDP and (ii) the economic growth rate. The results support the single threshold of the growth rate, which is expected to capture the existence of the investment or saving constraint with the economy. We find that developed and slowly developing economies are likely to benefit from capital outflows for higher investment incomes while emerging economies with growth rate higher than 3.4 - 5.7 percent can successfully take advantage of financial integration and resulting capital inflows. The findings are robust to changes in variable definition, model specification and data selection.
Dr. Kim earned PhD in economics from Stanford University. He has taught at various schools including National University of Singapore, Korea and Sogang Universities in Korea, Southern Illinois University, and American University of Sharjah. He joined the Gatton College, University of Kentucky in 1991.
Yoonbai Kim
2023-06-09 14:12:47
Zijingang Campus
Collaborative Knowledge Building Learning Analysis, Computational Modeling and Instructional Intervention Research
14:00
Talk & Lecture
5
2769507
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2023-06-06
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Speaker: Ouyang Fan, ZJU 100 Young Professor and Doctoral supervisorAbstract: This talk will introduce learning analytics, data mining, and artificial intelligence algorithms in computer-supported collaborative learning.Venue: East 5 Teaching Building, Room 201, Zijingang Campus
Speaker:Ouyang Fan,ZJU 100 Young Professorand Doctoral supervisorVenue: East 5 Teaching Building, Room 201, Zijingang Campus
Ouyang Fan
2023-06-08 14:00:00
East 5 Teaching Building, Room 201, Zijingang Campus
Scientific Spirit & National Identity — CHU Kochen's Journey
15:30
Talk & Lecture
6
2767591
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2023-06-02
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Speaker: YANG ShufengMember of the Chinese Academy of SciencesProfessor of the School of Earth Sciences of ZJUDirector of the Research Center of Petroleum BasinStructure of the Ministry of Education of ChinaVenue: North Teaching Building A105, International Campus
Speaker: AcademicianYANG ShufengAcademician of the Chinese Academy of SciencesProfessor of the School of Earth Sciences of ZJUDirector of the Research Center of Petroleum BasinStructure of the Ministry of Education of ChinaVenue: North Teaching Building A105, International Campus
YANG Shufeng
2023-06-06 15:30:00
International Campus
On Messages — Morally Significant, Communicative Side-effects
16:15-18:15
Talk & Lecture
7
2767526
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2023-06-02
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Speaker: Julius Schönherr is an assistant professor at Peking University. He graduated from the University of Maryland in 2019 with a thesis on social coordination and the problem of other minds. His research, which has been published in journals such as Philosophical Studies, Synthese and the British Journal of the Philosophy of Science, spans a wide range of topics in social epistemology, the philosophy of mind and moral philosophy. His current focus is on issues concerning epistemic injustice. Here, he outlines the scope and dimensions of harm one can experience in one's capacity as a knower.Venue: Room 311, Building 4, Chengjun Yuan, Zijingang CampusAbstract: Many speech acts have morally significant, communicative side-effects, i.e., they give uptake to morally problematic propositions that are neither part of the literal or implicated meaning of the speaker’s utterance, nor are they presupposed by the speaker. I call these communicative side-effects messages. For instance, experimental evidence suggests that talk of “inner city crime” tends to give uptake to morally problematic inferences about black crime that may be wholly unintended by the speaker. While the evaluative properties involved in messages have been thoroughly recognized and, more importantly, analyzed, a similar analysis of these messages’ deontic properties – i.e., the conditions under which it is (im)permissible for a speaker to send them – has yet to be forthcoming. In this talk, I will provide this analysis. I shall appeal to the famous doctrine of double effect, which I will modify to accommodate the fact that it is sometimes permissible to send a harmful message if audience uptake is sufficiently irrational.
Speaker: Julius Schönherris an assistant professor at Peking University. He graduated from the University of Maryland in 2019 with a thesis on social coordination and the problem of other minds. His research, which has been published in journals such as Philosophical Studies, Synthese and the British Journal of the Philosophy of Science, spans a wide range of topics in social epistemology, the philosophy of mind and moral philosophy. His current focus is on issues concerning epistemic injustice.
Julius Schönherr
2023-06-05 16:15:00
Zijingang Campus
FX Option Volume
14:00-15:30
Talk & Lecture
8
2760067
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2023-05-22
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Speaker: Prof. WANG Tianyu, School of Economicsand Management, Tsinghua UniversityChair: Prof. YU Yifan, School of Economics, Zhejiang UniversityVenue: 426, Buiding of School of Economics, Zijingang Campus, Zhejiang UniversityTime: 14:00-15:30 on May 26, 2023Abstract: We study the information content of over-the-counter foreign exchange (FX) option volume using a granular dataset with counterparty identities and contract characteristics. We find that FX option volume negatively predicts future exchange rate returns, especially when the concentration of informed investors increases, during periouds of high dollar demand, and with options offering higher leverage opportunities. Our findings support an asymmetric information model, where informed traders choose whether to trade in the option market to exploit their information advantage. We also document that hedge funds and real money investors display superior skills at predicting future exchange rates compared to less sophisticated players.
Tianyu Wang, an associate professor of Finance at the School of Economics and Management, Tsinghua University, mainly researches the asset pricing, financial intermediation and international finance.
2023-05-26 14:00:00
426, Buiding of School of Economics, Zijingang Campus, Zhejiang University
A Tax-Shaped Retail Landscape
9:30-11:00
Talk & Lecture
9
2758681
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2023-05-18
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Speaker: Dr. FANG Limin (University of British Columbia)Venue: Zijingang CampusAbstract: We investigate the impact that uniform "one-size-fits-all" tax policies have on shaping the retail landscape. An entry model demonstrates that tax effects on retailer entry can amplify market concentration. Using data about retail establishments in the United States, we show that while they are more likely to open in markets with favorable state tax policies, these markets become more concentrated as entry is dominated by the largest chains. Therefore, tax policies might impact the retail industry competitiveness, despite the policies' uniform design.
We investigate the impact that uniform "one-size-fits-all" tax policies have on shaping the retail landscape. An entry model demonstrates that tax effects on retailer entry can amplify market concentration. Using data about retail establishments in the United States, we show that while they are more likely to open in markets with favorable state tax policies, these markets become more concentrated as entry is dominated by the largest chains.
FANG Limin
2023-05-19 09:30:00
Online and Offline