BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – In the last four weeks, more than 3.5 million Ukrainians have fled their country to escape Russian forces, facing an uncertain future and placing new economic demands on host countries such as Poland. Besides this recent crisis, more than 80 million people have been forcibly displaced worldwide, notably in Syria, Venezuela, Afghanistan,… Read more »
Research
Project helps businesses and government work together to prepare for environmental change
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Leaders from several of Indiana’s largest employers and at nine cities across the Hoosier state are meeting to discuss how to better collaborate on resilience to climate change, through a federally funded project led by faculty at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business and the IU Environmental Resilience Institute. As a… Read more »
Kelley professor studies increased use of artificial intelligence in cybersecurity
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – For decades, movies and books have portrayed the potential of artificial intelligence and researchers continue to explore ways in which computers outpace humans. Professors at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business are conducting significant research and teaching about how AI is used, including increasingly in cybersecurity. One of those researchers, Sagar… Read more »
Kelley professor’s M-Score model remains most viable means of predicting corporate fraud
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Enhanced oversight over the auditing profession and firms’ financial reporting has led to a proliferation of models to predict financial statement fraud. But one of the first forensic models, the M-Score, devised by an Indiana University Kelley School of Business professor in the late 90s, remains accurate and is the most economically viable for investors… Read more »
Donald Kuratko, Kelley’s entrepreneurial leader, receives prestigious lifetime achievement award
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Donald F. Kuratko, a distinguished scholar at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business and executive and academic director of the Johnson Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, has received the highest honor presented by the United States Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship. The award was presented to Kuratko on Jan. 9,… Read more »
Kelley School’s Indiana Business Review offers a glimpse into what Hoosiers can expect in 2022
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — After a year off the road, economists and faculty members at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business in November renewed their tradition of presenting an economic forecast for the coming year in person to groups of community and business leaders around the state. Kelley faculty presented their 2022 Business Outlook… Read more »
Kelley expert: Gift cards are a likely present this holiday season, due to supply chain issues
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Amid supply chain issues resulting in emptying store shelves, the most common present under the Christmas tree this year may be a gift card, according to a retail expert at the Indiana University Kelley School of Business. “Everything I have read says there’s plenty of demand. I wonder what it’s going to… Read more »
U.S. News ranks IU, Kelley faculty research activities as among most impactful worldwide
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Indiana University, the Department of Economics in the College of Arts and Sciences and the Kelley School of Business rank 24th worldwide and 14th nationally in U.S. News & World Report’s rankings of “Best Global Universities for Economics and Business.” Unlike U.S. News’ other rankings of degree programs, this ranking primarily ranks… Read more »
Kelley prof: Doctors should rely less on ‘mental shortcuts’ when deciding patient care
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. – Algorithms and analytics are now common used by professional sports, in sales forecasts, lending decisions and by car insurance providers. Managers and other decision makers no longer simply “go with their gut.” But doctors often remain reluctant to introduce such information when making medical decisions for patients. In an article published in… Read more »
Research: Very low effective tax rates often do not reflect high levels of corporate tax avoidance
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Companies’ low effective tax rates have drawn the ire of politicians, policymakers, the media and the public. As Congress begins debating changes to corporate taxes to partially fund a $3.5 trillion budget plan, the Biden administration is raising questions about how much corporations pay in taxes. But new research from the Indiana… Read more »