Culture is a core element of human coexistence and encompasses all areas of life, including the economy. The influence of culture on various economic dimensions is the subject of numerous studies and provides important insights into core issues of economic behavior: Which rules and incentives are needed for a successful corporate culture? What role do cultural values play in financial decisions? How can we identify and change harmful practices based on misbeliefs and misconceptions? Answers to these and other important questions are provided by numerous experts in lectures, interviews, and papers made possible by the UBS Center.
Culture is a core element of human coexistence and encompasses all areas of life, including the economy. The influence of culture on various economic dimensions is the subject of numerous studies and provides important insights into core issues of economic behavior: Which rules and incentives are needed for a successful corporate culture? What role do cultural values play in financial decisions? How can we identify and change harmful practices based on misbeliefs and misconceptions? Answers to these and other important questions are provided by numerous experts in lectures, interviews, and papers made possible by the UBS Center.
The UBS Center offers two publication series. The Public Paper series makes research on topics of key social relevance available to a broader audience in a simplified, compact, and highly readable format. The Policy Brief series can give governments and businesses the rigorous and clear insights necessary for informed debates and decisions. They are a condensed and non-technical version of some of our top research papers.
Economists have typically assumed that the only way, as a leader, to get people to do things is to use carrots (e.g., pay raises) or sticks (e.g., threats of firing) to incentivize the behavior. One of the important contributions of recent research on leadership is to test the extent to which this really is true. Can leaders also motivate and inspire workers with their statements and speeches? Or, is the creation of hard incentives the only way to get followers to do something? Public paper No. 3 by Roberto Weber overviews the development in economic science on this subject.
A sound corporate culture drives a company’s overall performance sustainably – this is not only common sense, but also evidenced in research. Why is culture so important for economic success, and what are the characteristics of a successful corporate culture? Public Paper No 7 by Ernst Fehr puts cooperation and feedback center stage.
To what extent can differences in culture and attitudes towards work explain differences in unemployment across time and space? Policy brief No. 3/18 by Josef Zweimüller examines variations in the time that unemployed people in Switzerland spend looking for work, comparing residents of Swiss nationality who speak German with residents who speak French or Italian.
Employment rates for women in Saudi Arabia are very low. By custom, they cannot decide for themselves whether to work or not – they need the consent of their male guardian (either their husband or father). Whether men permit their wives or daughters to work depends crucially on social norms. Policy brief No 1/19 by David Yanagizawa-Drott reports evidence that most Saudi men privately believe that women should be allowed to work, but that they underestimate the extent to which other men share their views.
The UBS Center offers two publication series. The Public Paper series makes research on topics of key social relevance available to a broader audience in a simplified, compact, and highly readable format. The Policy Brief series can give governments and businesses the rigorous and clear insights necessary for informed debates and decisions. They are a condensed and non-technical version of some of our top research papers.
Economists have typically assumed that the only way, as a leader, to get people to do things is to use carrots (e.g., pay raises) or sticks (e.g., threats of firing) to incentivize the behavior. One of the important contributions of recent research on leadership is to test the extent to which this really is true. Can leaders also motivate and inspire workers with their statements and speeches? Or, is the creation of hard incentives the only way to get followers to do something? Public paper No. 3 by Roberto Weber overviews the development in economic science on this subject.
The Center’s events come in different formats, including two annual conferences with leading representatives from the academic, private, and public sectors debating a key contemporary economic issue. The Opinion events feature top representatives from academia to voice their views in public speeches. The Center hosted several events on the topic of inequality, opportunities, and development in the past 10 years.
At this UBS Center Opinion event, Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman gave an overview of his book “Thinking, Fast and Slow.” Kahneman distinguishes between fast thinking and slow thinking. Slow thinking could be described as conscious, informed thinking, fast thinking as unconscious and instinct. Both slow and fast thinking are part of human nature, as are risk aversion and optimism. According to Kahneman, people respond more strongly to losses than to gains.
Economic models tend to assume that people are informed about the decisions they make, so that consumers are able to make markets work to their advantage. At this UBS Center Opinion event, Nobel laureate Robert Shiller argued that this assumption is at least partially wrong, as many competitive markets by their very nature spawn deception and trickery.
Despite our intentions, why do we so often fail to act in our own best interest? Why does paying for things often feel like it causes physical pain? Why do we overvalue things that we’ve worked to put together? What are the forces that influence our behavior? Dan Ariely, James B. Duke Professor of Psychology & Behavioral Economics at Duke University, came to Zurich to answer these questions at the UBS Center Opinion event.
Culture and economics are closely interlinked: a country’s economic success depends on the quality of its culture. This insight is not new, yet, it has long been ignored. It has returned, however, to the center of economists’ attention, at the 2018 Forum for Economic Dialogue, with experts such as Sir Paul Collier, Armin Falk, Alessandra Fogli, Joe Henrich, Alan Posener, Raffaela Sadun, Simona Scarpaleggia and Guido Tabellini.
The Center’s events come in different formats, including two annual conferences with leading representatives from the academic, private, and public sectors debating a key contemporary economic issue. The Opinion events feature top representatives from academia to voice their views in public speeches. The Center hosted several events on the topic of inequality, opportunities, and development in the past 10 years.
At this UBS Center Opinion event, Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman gave an overview of his book “Thinking, Fast and Slow.” Kahneman distinguishes between fast thinking and slow thinking. Slow thinking could be described as conscious, informed thinking, fast thinking as unconscious and instinct. Both slow and fast thinking are part of human nature, as are risk aversion and optimism. According to Kahneman, people respond more strongly to losses than to gains.
Im Dauereinsatz für mehr Diversität Finanz und Wirtschaft vom 12.11.2018 lesen
Wie wichtig Kultur für den Erfolg ist Tagesanzeiger vom 21.11.2018 lesen
Warum Europas Staaten sich nicht näherkommen NZZ vom 21.11.2018 lesen
Ehe und Erben: Joseph Henrich erklärt den Aufstieg des Westens NZZ vom 4.12.2018 lesen
Behavioral Foundations of Corporate Culture Harvard Law School Forum vom 12.3.2019 read
Moving the needle on social norms Worldbank Blogs vom 30.5.2019 read