1/25/2024 0 Comments Economist mini diary 2017![]() Teresa is the author of The Progress Principle, Creativity in Context, and Growing Up Creative, as well as over 150 scholarly papers, chapters, case studies, and presentations. She was a director of Seaman Corporation for 25 years, and has served on the boards of other organizations. Teresa was the host/instructor of Against All Odds: Inside Statistics, a 26-part instructional series originally produced for broadcast on PBS. In addition to participating in various executive programs at Harvard Business School, she created the MBA course Managing for Creativity, and has taught several courses to first-year MBA students. She has presented her theories, research results, and practical implications to various groups in business, government, and education, including Apple, IDEO, Procter & Gamble, Roche Pharma, Genentech, TEDx Atlanta,the Society for Human Resource Management, and Pfizer. In 2020, she was named one of the top 50 scholars, by citation count, in business/management ( PLOS Biology). Teresa’s work has earned several awards: the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Academy of Management’s OB Division (2018) the Distinguished Scholar Award from the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (2017) the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Israel Organizational Behavior Conference (2018) the Center for Creative Leadership Best Paper Award (in Leadership Quarterly) (2005) and the Torrance Award from the National Association for Gifted Children (1998). Her current research program focuses on psychological and social aspects of the retirement transition. More recently, she researched and published on how life inside organizations can influence people and their performance. Previously, her 45-year program of research on how the work environment can influence creativity and motivation yielded a theory of creativity and innovation methods for assessing creativity, motivation, and the work environment and a set of prescriptions for maintaining and stimulating innovation. Her current research investigates how people approach and experience the transition to retirement. That said, if the number of domestic COVID-19 reported cases rise significantly over the next couple of weeks, we would not rule out an intra-meeting cut in March.Teresa Amabile is a Baker Foundation Professor at Harvard Business School. Originally educated and employed as a chemist, Teresa received her Ph.D. Tanvee Gupta Jain, economist, UBS Securities India, said: “We now expect the MPC to ease the repo rate by a further 75 bps over the next 12 months (vs 25 bps earlier), with the first cut likely in the April meeting. Upasna Bhardwaj, economist, Kotak Mahindra Bank, said, “With domestic and global growth expected to face downside risks from the spread of COVID-19 and deflationary forces emerging we see room for up to 50bps of rate cut by the MPC, with any further easing contingent on the evolving growth environment.”Īnalysts pointed out that there is limited scope for fiscal action, and therefore, monetary policy will have to step in to support growth. That would only give further licence to the RBI and the MPC to deliver a deep and immediate rate cut,” he said. Further, an FOMC meeting is slotted on March 18 and US rates are seen as heading to 0% soon. “The RBI would need to call for an ad-hoc meeting of the MPC, which the governor could well do. ![]() Banks’ credit likely to grow 12%-13% YoY in FY24: SBI report
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