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Iván Marinovic

Iván Marinovic
Assistant Professor, Accounting
Contact Info
IvánMarinovic
Assistant Professor of Accounting
Academic Area: 
Accounting

Research Statement

Professor Iván Marinovic's research is in the area of applications of Information Economics in accounting and finance. In particular, his recent research focuses on issues of disclosure, earnings management and optimal standards.

Bio

Iván Marinovic joined the Stanford Graduate School of Business as an Assistant Professor of Accounting in July 2011. Before joining the Stanford GSB, he taught microeconomics in the Business Department of Universidad de los Andes, Chile. Professor Marinovic’s research focuses on applications of economics of information in accounting and finance. Professor Marinovic earned a BA degree in Economics and MA in Financial Economics, both in 2001, from the Catholic University of Chile. He also earned a Master’s degree in Economic Theory from the Toulouse School of Economics in 2007 and a PhD in Accounting, Information and Management from the Kellogg School of Management in 2011.

Academic Degrees

  • PhD in Accounting, Northwestern University, 2011
  • Master in Economic Theory, Toulouse School of Economics, 2007
  • Master in Financial Economics, Catholic University of Chile, 2001

Academic Appointments

  • Assistant Professor, Stanford Graduate School of Business since 2011
  • Lecturer of Economics, Universidad de los Andes, Santiago, Chile, 2001-2005

Publications

Journal Articles

Iván Marinovic. Journal of Economics & Management Strategy. February 10, 2015, Vol. 24, Issue 1, Pages 165-188.
Jeremy Bertomeu, Iván Marinovic. The Accounting Review (Forthcoming). 2015.
Iván Marinovic, Swaminathan Sridharan. Journal of Accounting and Economics (Forthcoming). 2015.
Iván Marinovic. Review of Accounting Studies. 2014, Vol. 19, Issue 3, Pages 1078-1085.
Iván Marinovic, Anne Beyer, Ilan Guttman. Journal of Accounting Research. 2014, Vol. 52, Issue 4, Pages 817-847.
Iván Marinovic. RAND Journal of Economics. 2013, Vol. 44, Issue 1, Pages 145-167.
Iván Marinovic, Marco Ottaviani, Peter Sorensen. Handbook of Economic Forecasting. Elsevier, 2011, Vol. 2, Pages 690-720.

Working Papers

A Theory of Hard and Soft Information | PDF
Iván Marinovic, Jeremy Bertomeu, March 162015
The Credibility of Performance Feedback in Tournaments | PDF
Iván Marinovic, September 172014
No News is Good News: Voluntary Disclosure in the Face of Litigation | PDF
Iván Marinovic, Felipe Varas, September 52014
Cashing-In Credibility | PDF
Iván Marinovic, Felipe Varaa, January 242014
Earnings Management and Earnings Quality: Theory and Evidence
Anne Beyer, Ilan Guttman, Iván Marinovic, July 2012

Courses Taught

Degree Courses

2015-16

This course provides an introduction to the concepts and tools of managerial accounting. The first part of the course covers alternative costing methods and illustrates how the resulting cost information can be used to analyze the profitability...

This course develops tools from information economics to study the strategic interactions between agents inside a firm and between firm insiders and market participants. Common to these studies is that agents acquire private information that is...

2014-15

This course provides an introduction to the concepts and tools of managerial accounting. The first part of the course covers alternative costing methods and illustrates how the resulting cost information can be used to analyze the profitability...

This course develops tools from information economics to study the strategic interactions between agents inside a firm and between firm insiders and market participants. Common to these studies is that agents acquire private information that is...

2013-14

This course provides a comprehensive introduction to the concepts and tools of managerial accounting. The first part of the course demonstrates how management can rely on internal accounting information to measure and manage the profitability of...

Insights by Stanford Business

July 28, 2015
A new analysis shows that some pharmaceutical companies may be dragging their feet on disclosing critical data.
July 13, 2015
Honesty isn't always the best policy when it comes to performance reviews.