Topics
MIT SMR Strategy Forum
U.S. regulations have been rolled back in a number of areas, including emissions standards and clean water. Companies will decide to voluntarily adhere to rules that closely resemble the original standards.
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Raw Responses
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Responses weighted by panelists’ level of confidence
The deregulation agenda in the Trump era has been wide ranging and ambitious. Some rollbacks have sparked a divide in affected industries, and notably, many major energy companies, automakers, and other industrial giants have opposed new initiatives that would accelerate the effects of climate change.
Panelists
About the MIT SMR Strategy Forum
Questions of strategy are universal: Every business leader must tackle a topic that’s central to how and why organizations compete. The MIT Sloan Management Review Strategy Forum offers a regular glimpse into the minds of academic leaders who have been researching and observing how businesses determine their strategy for decades.
Each month, the MIT SMR Strategy Forum poses a single question to our panel of experts in the fields of business, economics, and management. Panelists are asked to agree or disagree with a prediction, indicate their level of confidence, and provide a brief explanation for their response.
This page allows readers to engage with the results of each survey. You can see the share of panelists who agree or disagree with each prediction, how confident they feel about their answers, and the thinking behind their responses. To explore individual panelists’ thought processes about each question, click through to their voting history page. Readers can also submit their own suggestions for future topics to smr-strategy@mit.edu.
Forum Chairs
Raffaella Sadun is a professor of business administration in the Strategy unit at Harvard Business School. Professor Sadun’s research focuses on the economics of productivity, management, and organizational change. Her research documents the economic and cultural determinants of managerial choices, as well as their implications for organizational performance in both the private and public sectors (including health care and education). She tweets @raffasadun.
Timothy Simcoe is an associate professor of strategy and innovation at Boston University’s Questrom School of Business.