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Yongxiang Wang
Associate Professor of Finance, Marshall School of Business, University of Southern California
Yongxiang Wang is an associate professor of Finance at Marshall School of Business, University of Southern California. His main work is about how rent-seeking and politics affect resource allocation and efficiency. He has studied a range of prominent social, economic and political phenomena in China, including privatization, business groups, workplace safety, Sino-Japanese conflict, fellow selection at the China Academy of Science, air pollution and insurance industry, and migration and the Sent-down Youth program during the Cultural Revolution. He has published in leading economics, finance, Strategy, and Accounting journals, including the Journal of Political Economy, the Review of Economic Studies, the American Economic Journal: Applied, the Review of Financial Studies, the Journal of Financial Economics, the Administrative Science Quarterly, the Management Science, and the Journal of Accounting and Economics.
Recent work by Yongxiang Wang
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Social ties and ‘hometown favouritism’ towards local officials in China
Hometown auditors report lower suspicious expenditures, implying that social ties are associated with greater leniency
Published 12.06.20
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Internal migration improves economic security in rural China
Government policies that facilitate internal migration not only drive economic growth, but also improve the welfare of rural households
Published 15.10.18
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Land rights and agricultural efficiency
Legal protection for agricultural land leasing contracts facilitates productivity-enhancing trades and increases agricultural efficiency
Published 22.01.18