The Event Study Method in Logistics Research: Overview and a Critical Analysis

Wood, L. C., & Wang, J. X. (2018). The event study method in logistics research: Overview and a critical analysis. International Journal of Applied Logistics, 8(1), 57-79.

21 Pages Posted: 28 Jan 2018

See all articles by Lincoln Wood

Lincoln Wood

University of Otago - Department of Management; Curtin University - School of Information Systems

Jason Wang

University of Otago - Department of Management

Date Written: January 18, 2018

Abstract

Logistics researchers often want to understand how particular management changes or external factors influence a firm. While this can be accomplished using operational or survey data, we outline an alternative approach using the event study method where inferences are made with the estimated magnitude and direction of abnormal returns. The calculated abnormal returns can be used as a dependent variable in a cross-sectional regression to understand which managerial decisions may affect these outcomes. As the method remains little used by logistics researchers, we outline key assumptions and design considerations. We review recent articles and provide suggestions for logistics researchers improve the rigor of their research designs. This article aims to provide an overview of the method for logistics and supply chain researchers with a focus on developing the capability to design an effective study and to evaluate research articles to assess methodological weaknesses that may lead to untrustworthy results.

Keywords: event study, logistics research, research methods, literature review

Suggested Citation

Wood, Lincoln and Wang, Jason, The Event Study Method in Logistics Research: Overview and a Critical Analysis (January 18, 2018). Wood, L. C., & Wang, J. X. (2018). The event study method in logistics research: Overview and a critical analysis. International Journal of Applied Logistics, 8(1), 57-79., Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3105082

Lincoln Wood (Contact Author)

University of Otago - Department of Management ( email )

Dunedin
New Zealand

Curtin University - School of Information Systems ( email )

Australia

Jason Wang

University of Otago - Department of Management ( email )

Dunedin
New Zealand

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