Research Espresso | Aug 2021 Issue 10

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Aug 2021 ISSUE

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Creative


Aug 2021 ISSUE

10 Contents Research Insight

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How impactful can the immigrant vote be ? News

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Scholarship for Outstanding Performance for Hong Kong PhD Fellowship Scheme (HKPFS)Awardees

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Research Excellence

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Upcoming Events

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Research Insight


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How impactful can the immigrant vote be?


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ecent research suggests that the migrated population has a strong influence on the electoral outcomes in their home countries. How about the impact of these people in where they reside? While keen to adapt to their new home, immigrants don’t abandon their culture as they plant new roots but carry with them everything from their cuisine and music to their customs and prejudices.

In a recent paper, Dr. Kin Ming Wong uses data from Hong Kong to explore how immigrants can impact the politics of a host region. Once described by Lord Palmerston as “a barren rock with nary a house upon it”, Hong Kong is a city built by immigrants who and, more recently, under the one-way permit scheme. Numbering more than two million, mainland-born residents account for approximately 32% of Hong Kong’s population and thus constitute an important demographics. Meanwhile the sharp divide between the pro-democracy camp and the pro-government camp makes it easy to classify political preference, especially since there was hardly any competition between pro-government candidates across the more than 1,000 district council elections studied by Wong. Findings reveal that pro-government candidates were likely to perform better in districts with a higher proportion of residents born in mainland China, and this effect has also been increasing over time. With further investigation, this pattern comes from the fact that recent immigrants are more likely to support pro-government candidates. Indeed, Wong shows that each increase of 1% in the share of mainland immigrants who have lived in Hong Kong for less than 10 years translates into a 0.48% increase in support for pro-government candidates.


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Wong attributes this to why immigrants moved to Hong Kong in the first place. Mainlanders who came to Hong Kong up the 1990s were fleeing the political and economic turmoil prevalent in mainland China during that era. Meanwhile, recent immigrants moved to Hong Kong when the country was more prosperous and stable. Even if they don’t yet have the right to vote, they can still influence the voting pattern by transferring information and beliefs to the population with the voting rights. The research reminds us the important role of migration in shaping political institutions. Moreover, experience of the migrated population in their countires is vital to how they vote in their new home.

Dr. Aries Kin-Ming Wong Lecturer I, Department of Economics Wong, K. (2021). Migration and Political Institution: Other Side of the

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News Scholarship for Outstanding Performance for Hong Kong PhD Fellowship Scheme (HKPFS) Awardees

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onald Hung (PhD in Department of Economics) and Viola Yin (PhD in Department of Management) have been awarded the Scholarship for Outstanding Performance for HKPFS Awardees, to recognize their excellent performance in the first year of PhD study.

Our PhD Programme


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Research Excellence

When Socialization Goes Wrong: Understanding We-Intention to Participate in Collective Trolling in Virtual Communities Journal of the Association for Information Systems

Prof. Christy M. K. Cheung Professor Department of Finance and Decision Sciences

https://aisel.aisnet.org/jais/forthcoming.html

Ambivalent bosses: An examination of supervisor expressed emotional ambivalence on subordinate task engagement Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes

Dr. Jia Hui Lim Assistant Professor Department of Management

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.obhdp.2021.05.001


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The effect of mindfulness and job demands on motivation and performance trajectories across the workweek: An entrainment theory perspective Journal of Applied Psychology http://doi.org/10.1037/apl0000887

Dr. Siting Wang Assistant Professor Department of Management

You Speak, I Speak: The Social-Cognitive Mechanisms of Voice Contagion Journal of Management Studies https://doi.org/10.1111/joms.12698

Dr. Frederick H.K. Yim Associate Professor Department of Marketing


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Upcoming Events Economics 10 September 2021 / 9:00 –10:30

29 October 2021 / 9:00 –10:30

Asset Safety Versus Asset Liquidity

Private Renegotiations and Government Interventions in Debt Chains

Prof. Athanasios GEROMICHALOS University of California, Davis

13 September 2021 / 10:00 –11:30 Regulating Hospital Drug Prices in China: A Micro Perspective Prof. Pai XU University of Hong Kong

24 September 2021 / 9:00 –10:30 The Importance of Beliefs in Shaping Macroeconomic Outcomes Prof. Roger FARMER University of California, Los Angeles and University of Warwick

8 October 2021 / 9:00 –10:30 Collateral Reallocation Prof. Jason Roderick DONALDSON Washington University in St. Louis

Prof. Vincent GLODE University of Pennsylvania


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Centre for Business Analytics and the Digital Economy 1 September 2021 / 09:00 –10:30

7 October 2021 / 9:00 –10:30

Re-framing China: The Counter-Narrative Strategies of Chinese State Media on Twitter

Credit Lines, Bank Deposits or CBDC?

Prof. Jennifer PAN Stanford University

Modern Payment Systems Prof. Martin SCHNEIDER Stanford University

2 September 2021 / 16:00 –17:30 Best Before? Expiring CBDC and Loss Recovery Prof. Maarten VAN OORDT Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

9 September 2021 / 16:00 –17:30

21 October 2021 / 9:00 –10:30 Economic Implications of Scaling Blockchains: Why the Consensus Protocol Matters Prof. Thomas RIVERA McGill University

Fundamental Pricing of Utility Tokens

28 October 2021 / 15:00 –16:30

Prof. Julien PRAT CREST and Ecole Polytechnique

The Value of “New” and “Old” Intermediation in Online Debt Crowdfunding Prof. Nicola PAVANINI Tilburg University

23 September 2021 / 9:00 –10:30 FinTech Lending and Cashless Payments Prof. Boris VALLÉE Harvard University


Research Espresso – Impactful Research Insights for Business! The Research Espresso, a bimonthly e-publication covering everything you need to know about the latest research developments at the HKBU School of Business, focuses on four key areas: Research Insights (the main research topic of the month), Research Excellence (recognition of faculty members’ research achievements), News (research-related updates), and Seminars (sharing research skills and knowledge). The idea is to provide business practitioners with the most recent research findings from the School's faculty. We want to build links between research and practice and to ensure that the School's research has business and societal impact. Enjoy reading, and your feedback and input is always welcome!

https://bus.hkbu.edu.hk/ busd-external@hkbu.edu.hk


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