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196 records from EconBiz based on author Name
1. International transmission of monetary policy shocks and the bank lending channel : evidence from Australia
Yahyaei, Hamid; Singh, Abhay; Smith, Tom;2024
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability:

2. How to conduct qualitative research in finance
abstract"Asserting that the qualitative research paradigm is entrenched in the social sciences as a discipline in its own right, this book brings together finance and qualitative research to encourage researchers to expand their respective bodies of knowledge. In doing so, it promotes a synergy of insights through the mixing of perspectives. The book first covers the fundamentals of qualitative research including design, implementation and analysis. Chapters then address important questions regarding ethics and the publication process, while considering the underlying theme of reaching and respecting your audience and focusing on what editors are looking for. The final part presents real-world examples from a diverse and international range of authors, covering key topics including the use of digital tools, ethnographic research design, indigenous investment, and the human impact of financial loss. Providing a comprehensive guide for finance researchers on how to produce impactful qualitative research, this book is a vital resource for teaching as well as research advice for academics and students. It is also ideal for those in related fields including accounting, economics and actuarial studies."--Publisher's website
Kaczynski, Dan; Salmona, Michelle; Smith, Tom;2024
Type: Aufsatzsammlung; Beiträge
Availability: Link Link
3. International Monetary Policy, Credit Supply, and Bank Lending Channels
abstractWe examine the transmission of international monetary policy shocks through the bank-lending channel. Exploiting a panel of data on Australian Authorized Deposit-Taking Institutions (ADIs), we show that the supply of credit is vulnerable to an international pass-through of monetary policy by offshore central banks. Contingent on the lending product, commercial banks respond differently to conventional and unconventional monetary policies, with banks headquartered in Asia demonstrating the highest degree of lending elasticity. Household and non-financial corporate loans are the most susceptible channels to policy shocks, while higher-margin lending, non-core assets, and reservable liabilities are insensitive. Unconventional monetary policies have a muted effect compared to traditional measures
Yahyaei, Hamid; Singh, Abhay; Smith, Tom;2023
Availability: Link Link
4. Spinning Amazon’s Flywheel : How Amazon's Business Model Harms Competition -- A View from Europe
abstractAmazon is the largest e-commerce platform in many nations and its revenues have grown consistently over many years. Although Amazon has been subject to some antitrust investigations, competition law still has not fully grappled with the anticompetitive effects of Amazon’s business model, which has the Prime membership bundle of products at its core. For a long time, the prevailing consensus has been that Amazon is consumer-friendly because it drives down prices, speeds up delivery times and offers a bundle of attractive products through its Prime membership programme. This may still be superficially correct if viewed through the narrow prism of the consumer welfare standard with a focus on price. However, Amazon’s strategy is more problematic if we consider the aggregate effects of its various interlinked practices, and if we believe that the role of competition law is to protect a competitive market structure. Such a stance is closer to the approach taken in the EU than the US in recent years, but US progressives are now also seeking to evolve the enforcement of antitrust law.Against this background, this paper has two objectives. First, it seeks to show that Amazon’s problematic conduct, although diverse in nature and covering several distinct markets, includes vertical integration and the acquisition of rivals, exclusionary conduct, and the imposition of unfair trade terms and conditions. Second, with a focus on EU and UK law, it seeks to show that these problems require a combination of ex ante intervention (legislation such as the EU’s Digital Markets Act and the UK’s forthcoming Digital Markets, Competition and Consumer Bill and tighter merger control) and ex post intervention (tighter control of abusive conduct)
Geradin, Damien; Smith, Tom;2023
Availability: Link Link
5. Auditor pricing of abnormal income from sales of available for sale securities : evidence from the banking industry
Greiner, Adam J.; Kohlbeck, Mark J.; Smith, Thomas J.;2023
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link Link
6. On the resilience of Australian public universities : why our institutions may fail unless vice-chancellors rethink broken commercial business models
Guthrie, James; Linnenluecke, Martina K.; Martin-Sardesai, Ann; Shen, Yun; Smith, Tom;2022
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link Link
Citations: 8 (based on OpenCitations)
7. An examination of audit quality surrounding within-firm engagement office changes
Greiner, Adam J.; Higgs, Julia L.; Smith, Thomas J.;2024
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link Link
8. Maintaining a Level Playing Field When Big Tech Disrupts the Financial Services Sector
abstractGoogle, Apple, Facebook and Amazon (the “GAFAs”) have been slow to disrupt the financial services sector, but they are likely to do so in the coming years. The precise nature of the disruption and the appropriate regulatory response is not clear-cut, but the GAFAs’ advantages will stem from their control of the main customer access points, such as mobile operating systems, search engine results pages, app stores, and marketplaces. This paper discusses the GAFAs’ anticipated disruption in the financial services sector in the context of competition law enforcement and the emerging regulatory regimes in the EU and UK that seek to curb the GAFAs' market power. If the new rules are drafted carefully, consumers can benefit from the innovations of the GAFAs and others without suffering the long-run effects of their further accumulation of market power. The new rules should ensure that the GAFAs do not benefit from an asymmetry of regulatory obligations whereby they are not subject to the same rules as their financial services competitors. The GAFAs’ should not be able to leverage their market power from core activities into financial services such that their financial services competitors are hindered in reacting to the GAFAs’ competitive threat
Smith, Tom; Geradin, Damien;2021
Availability: Link Link
9. Material contract redactions and cybersecurity breaches
Hughes, Hilary; Smith, Thomas J.; Walton, Stephanie;2023
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link
10. A Primer on Global Environmental Change
abstractThis paper sets out the science behind global environmental change, defined by the US Global Change Research Act as ‘changes in the global environment (including alterations in climate, land productivity, oceans or other water resources, atmospheric chemistry, and ecological systems) that may alter the capacity of the Earth to sustain life’. We explain why there is still scepticism about the science in the business world and introduce eight gestalt shifts that are likely to change how executives think about environmental change and the threats and opportunities such changes present. The paper concludes with future research directions on business and global environmental change and outlines how the business case for investment in clean technology means that the transition to clean tech is inevitable
Linnenluecke, Martina K.; Smith, Tom;2020
Availability: Link