| Twitter Digest: 2011-11-22 Posted: 22 Nov 2011 12:00 PM PST |
| How We Were All Misled Posted: 22 Nov 2011 11:34 AM PST John Lanchester in LRB: The evidence is clear: it is easy to mislead people about money, and easy to lead members of the public astray both individually and en masse, because when it comes to money, most of us, most of the time, don't know what we're doing. The corollary is also clear: the whole Western world misled itself over debt, and the road back from where we are goes only uphill. via How We Were All Misled by John Lanchester | The New York Review of Books.  
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| The Umbrella Man Posted: 22 Nov 2011 11:27 AM PST Wonderful short video work from Errol Morris on JFK and the “umbrella man”. Such loveliness.   
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| Going Public Decreases Innovation Posted: 22 Nov 2011 07:53 AM PST I’m generally skeptical of using patent data to measure innovation, but this is still an interesting paper on the relationship between innovation and going public. By this measure, going public reduces innovation. [-] Does Going Public Affect Innovation? Abstract This paper investigates the e§ects of going public on innovation. Using a novel data setconsisting of innovative firms that filed for an initial public offering (IPO), I compare the long-run innovation of firms that completed their filing and went public with that of firms that withdrew their filing and remained private. I use NASDAQ fluctuations during the book-building period as a source of exogenous variation that affects IPO completion but is unlikely to affect long run innovation. Using this instrumental variables strategy, I find that going public leads to a 50 percent decline in innovation novelty relative to firms that remained private, measured by standard patent-based metrics. The decline in innovation is driven by both an exodus of skilled inventors and a decline in productivity among remaining inventors. However, access to public equity markets allows firms to partially offset the decline in internally generated innovation by attracting new human capital and purchasing externally generated innovations through mergers and acquisitions. I find suggestive evidence that changes in firm governance and managerialincentives play an important role in explaining the results. Full paper here.  
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