Stephen Glaeser researches issues at the intersection of accounting and economics. He studies how innovative firms trade-off the benefits of communicating with investors against the costs of publicly revealing information about partially non-excludable innovations. He also is interested in how taxation affects real decisions and how imperfect information gives rise to agency conflicts.
Professor Glaeser teaches courses in managerial and financial accounting.
The Accounting Review and the Journal of Accounting and Economics have published his research.
He worked as an assistant vice president at Citi Hedge Fund Services and an internal audit team leader at Huntington National Bank.
He is completing his PhD in business administration from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. He received his MBA and BA from the Fisher College of Business at the Ohio State University.