Go back

Management Information Systems: Managing The Digital Firm(16th Edition)

Authors:

Kenneth Laudon, Jane Laudon

Free management information systems: managing the digital firm 16th edition kenneth laudon, jane laudon
3 ratings
Cover Type:Hardcover
Condition:Used

In Stock

Shipment time

Expected shipping within 2 Days
Access to 30 Million+ solutions Free
Ask 50 Questions from expert AI-Powered Answers
7 days-trial

Total Price:

$0

List Price: $56.58 Savings: $56.58(100%)
Access to 30 Million+ solutions
Ask 50 Questions from expert AI-Powered Answers 24/7 Tutor Help Detailed solutions for Management Information Systems: Managing The Digital Firm

Price:

$9.99

/month

Book details

ISBN: 0135191793, 978-0135191798

Book publisher: Pearson

Get your hands on the best-selling book Management Information Systems: Managing The Digital Firm 16th Edition for free. Feed your curiosity and let your imagination soar with the best stories coming out to you without hefty price tags. Browse SolutionInn to discover a treasure trove of fiction and non-fiction books where every page leads the reader to an undiscovered world. Start your literary adventure right away and also enjoy free shipping of these complimentary books to your door.

Book Summary: Financial dealer firms have invested heavily in recent years to develop information systems for risk measurement. I take it as given that technological progress is likely to continue at a rapid pace, making it less expensive for financial firms to assemble risk information. I look beyond questions of risk measurement methodology to investigate the implications of risk management information systems. By examining several theoretical models of the firm in the presence of asymmetric information, I explore how a financial firm's capital budgeting, incentive compensation, capital structure, and risk management activities are likely to change as it becomes less costly to assemble risk information. I also explore the likely effects of the falling cost of assembling risk information on a financial firm's organizational structure. Two common themes emerge: centralization within the firm and increased disclosure of risk information outside the firm are both likely to increase.