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Introduction
Dr. XIANG Bing is Professor of Accounting and the founding Dean of Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business. Prior to joining Cheung Kong GSB, Dr. Xiang pioneered and provided leadership in the EMBA and Executive Education programs at Guanghua School of Management, Peking University, served on the faculty of the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, and was one of the seven founding faculty members of the China-Europe International Business School (CEIBS). Dr. Xiang has delivered executive programs at many world-class universities and corporations, and is a well-known management consultant.
Research Area
His research interests focus on comparative corporate systems, corporate governance, transition and management of state-owned enterprises, private enterprise business models, and corporate competitiveness in emerging markets.
Achievements
Dr. Xiang, who holds a Ph.D. from the University of Alberta, has published research in leading international academic journals, and serves as an independent board member on a number of Hong Kong and Mainland-listed corporations.
Selected Publications
"Stationarity and Cointegration Tests of the Ohlson Model." Co-authored with Dave Qi and Woody Wu, Journal of Accounting, Auditing & Finance, 2000 (Spring) Volume 12, Number 2 (p. 141-160).
"Institutional factors influencing China's accounting reforms and standards." Accounting Horizons, 1998, Vol. 12 (2) (p.105-119).
" The reform of China's state-owned enterprises: the role of stock markets." in China in the Post-Deng Era, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Press, Hong Kong, 1998 (p.311-328).
"On the rationality of Value Line's quarterly earnings forecasts: evidence from alternative methods." Chinese Accounting Review 1997 (p. 115-156).
"Ownership structure reform and corporate performance: an empirical evaluation of Chinese shareholding companies." Co-authored with Woody Wu and Guochang Zhang. Hong Kong Journal of Business Management 1996 (p.53-67).
"Controlling corruption." The Hong Kong Accountant, September/October, 1996, p.46-49.
"The choice of return-generating models and cross-sectional dependence in event studies." The Contemporary Accounting Research 1993, Vol. 9 (p.365-94).
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