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Trish Beck

Trish Beck

· Program Director, Ed.D. in Leadership and Innovation and Clinical Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies

New York University · Educational Leadership and Policy Studies

Active 1989–2025

h-index96
Citations52.9k
Papers59636 last 5y
Funding
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About

Trish Beck is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Education Leadership and Policy Studies in the Department of Administration, Leadership, and Technology at NYU. She serves as the Program Director for the Ed.D. in Leadership and Innovation. Dr. Beck holds a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from Mount Saint Mary College, a Master of Science in Leadership and Health Care Management from Northeastern University, and a Doctor of Education in Leadership and Innovation from New York University. She is a Board-Certified Nurse Executive, a Board-Certified Healthcare Executive, and a fellow of the American College of Healthcare Executives. Her research centers on leadership theory and development. With extensive leadership experience within the non-profit healthcare sector, Dr. Beck has held numerous leadership roles including Chief Operating Officer, Associate Chief Nursing Officer, Assistant Vice President, Director, and Manager. She has demonstrated success in engaging and motivating teams through empathy and empowerment, driving innovation and improvement. As a steadfast servant leader, she emphasizes the importance of relationships and has served as a mentor and coach to her teams, sharing her knowledge and skills. In addition to her leadership experience, she possesses strong capabilities in strategic operations and program development, fostering a culture of collaboration across different teams and disciplines. She has led the development of various programs aimed at meeting community needs. Passionate about teaching, Dr. Beck has created numerous learning curriculums focused on leadership and innovation. She believes in a student-centered approach that fosters a safe and supportive environment, encouraging students to lean into vulnerability to excel as scholars.

Research topics

  • Medicine
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Internal medicine
  • Family medicine
  • Gerontology
  • Economics
  • Surgery
  • Financial system
  • Monetary economics
  • Psychology

Selected publications

  • Cross-border supervisory cooperation: a progress report and research agenda

    Finance · 2025-02-17

    article1st authorCorresponding

    Dans un monde de marchés financiers intégrés et de banques transfrontalières, les superviseurs nationaux sont confrontés à des informations limitées et à des incitations biaisées, ce qui peut exacerber la fragilité financière. Même si les autorités de contrôle ont commencé à coopérer au-delà des frontières, cette coopération reste largement en deçà d’une surveillance supranationale comme dans la zone euro. Cet article résume les recherches théoriques et empiriques récentes dans ce domaine ; il présente des données sur la coopération en matière de surveillance transfrontalière, montre l'impact (limité) sur la stabilité d'une telle coopération et les réactions des groupes bancaires mondiaux à une coopération accrue en matière de surveillance.

  • Discussion: Political Economy of Private Bank Governance in Bangladesh

    Cambridge University Press eBooks · 2024-01-10

    book-chapterOpen access1st authorCorresponding

    This chapter provides an analysis of the structure of the banking sector in Bangladesh, different performance indicators of the banking sector, the trend in NPLs, and efficiency levels of private banks. It also explores the politics of the banking sector and avenues of governance failures in relation to private commercial banks in Bangladesh. This poor performance of the banking sector is related to the low quality of the sector's lending operations. Through regulatory and policy capture, political patronage often leads to unproductive loans, or simply loans that bankers know will never be repaid. Also, cases of embezzlement through legal insider lending – that is to the bank's owners or their family – have been reported. NPLs, and the frequent need for monetary injection in state-owned banks or bailouts of private banks, are the manifestation of these governance failures of the whole sector. This chapter emphasises key reforms needed in the governance of the sector which include autonomy of the central bank, modification of the Banking Companies Act and strict adherence to it, and political commitment to penalise loan defaulters.

  • Addressing Banks’ Vulnerability to Deposit Runs: Revisiting the Facts, Arguments and Policy Options

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2024-01-01 · 2 citations

    articleOpen access1st authorCorresponding
  • Access to finance: adaptability and resilience during a global pandemic

    Accounting and Business Research · 2023-07-29 · 8 citations

    articleOpen access1st authorCorresponding

    Firms’ access to external finance is constrained by information asymmetries between lenders and borrowers, which are inversely related to firm size and economic growth. Pandemic and lockdown measures constituted an extraordinary shock for corporations, including for their funding, mitigated, however, by governments’ fiscal, monetary and regulatory responses. The combined effect of these measures created a virtuous circle between corporates, banks, and sovereigns, avoiding a funding crunch for either and keeping risk premiums at deflated levels. Some of the more recent shocks provide similar justification for government interventions. However, there is a trade-off between government support during tail events and the market distortions that come with such support programmes. The conjecture is that we will continue to see a stronger role for governments during this time of great volatility and a tightening on market-based funding for corporations.

  • Banking in Africa: Opportunities and Challenges in Volatile Times

    World Bank, Washington, DC eBooks · 2023-12-19 · 5 citations

    bookOpen access

    This paper surveys existing literature and data to take stock of the current state of banking systems across Sub-Saharan Africa. It documents different dimensions of the development of the banking systems in the region and compares Africa’s banking systems to those of comparable low- and lower-middle-income countries outside the region. The paper also discusses the progress in policies and institutions underpinning financial deepening and the results of specific innovations to reach traditionally unbanked segments of the population, such as innovative branch expansion programs, mobile banking, and new financial products. In view of the COVID-19 pandemic, the paper discusses government support for financial systems and banking sector performance during crises. Overall, the survey shows a picture of achievements and challenges, with progress along some fronts but other challenges persisting even as new ones arise, including the turning of the global financial cycle in 2022/23 and increasing geopolitical tensions.

  • Will Video Kill the Radio Star? Digitalisation and the Future of Banking

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2022-01-01 · 23 citations

    articleOpen access1st authorCorresponding
  • The puzzle of Europes banking union: progress and missing pieces

    Edward Elgar Publishing eBooks · 2022-10-07

    book-chapter1st authorCorresponding

    This short paper discusses progress made in regulatory reforms and constructing a European financial safety net. While it acknowledges the progress made, it points to important elements missing; further, the initial objectives of eliminating bail-out and doom-loop between bank and sovereign fragility and of creating a Single Market in Banking have not been achieved so far.

  • What Explains Remittance Fees? Panel Evidence

    IMF Working Paper · 2022-04-01 · 15 citations

    articleOpen access

    This paper uses data across 365 corridors to document time and country variation in remittance fees and explore factors predicting variation in remittance fees. We document a general reduction in such fees over the past decade although the goal of fees below 3 percent has not been met yet in many corridors. We identify both cost-and risk-based constraints and market structure as barriers to lower remittance fees. Higher transaction costs as result of a more rural population in the sending country and lower scale are associated with higher remittance fees. However, lower risks due to the stability of fixed exchange rates and Internet rather than cash payment are associated with lower remittance fees. Finally, remittance corridors dominated by banks and few players are characterized by higher fees.

  • Liquidity creation, investment, and growth

    Journal of Economic Growth · 2022-10-20 · 55 citations

    articleOpen access1st authorCorresponding

    Abstract Using panel analysis for a large cross-section of countries, we find that liquidity creation by banks is positively associated with economic growth at country and industry levels. Liquidity creation boosts tangible, but not intangible investment and does not contribute to growth in countries with a high share of industries reliant on intangible assets. These findings are consistent with a theoretical model in which liquidity creation fosters investment only if it is sufficiently tangible. Our results shed light on important heterogeneities in the role of banks in the economic development process and their limited role in countries’ transition to knowledge economies.

  • Have banks caught corona? Effects of COVID on lending in the U.S.

    Journal of Corporate Finance · 2022 · 96 citations

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Business
    • Monetary economics
    • Financial system

Frequent coauthors

  • Aslı Demirgüç-Kunt

    188 shared
  • Ross Levine

    Stanford University

    184 shared
  • Luc Laeven

    Centre for Economic Policy Research

    75 shared
  • Diana Lupulescu

    36 shared
  • Frédérique Dahan

    36 shared
  • John Simpson

    36 shared
  • Florencio Lopez

    Université Paris Cité

    36 shared
  • Benjamin Regitz

    Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Romania

    36 shared

Labs

Awards & honors

  • Fellow of the American College of Healthcare Executives
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