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1. B. Keszler, J.P. Kennedy, Akron, OH, USA Synthesis of High
Molecular Weight Poly (Beta-Pinene) 2. Y. Chujo, T. Saegusa, Kyoto,
Japan OrganicPolymer Hybrids with Silica Gel by Means of the
Sol-Gel Method 3. A. Halperin, Mainz, FRG, M. Tirrell, T.P. Lodge,
Minnea- polis, MN, USA Tethered Chains in Polymer Microstructures
4. T.Q. Nguyen, H.-H. Kausch, Lausanne, CH Mechanochemical
Degradation in Transient Elongational Flow 5. P. Corradini, G.
Guerra, Naples, Italy Polymorphism in Polymers 6. K.A. Armitstead,
G. Goldbeck-Wood, A. Keller, Bristol, UK Review of Polymer
Crystallization Theories 7. M. Fischer, Fribourg, CH Properties and
Failure of Polymers with Tailored Distances between Crosslinks 8.
M. Stamm, Mainz, FRG Polymer Interfaces on a Molecular Scale:
Comparison of Techniques and Some Examples
This book examines the role of uncertainty on financial decisions -
and, consequently, on financial markets - in the buildup to and
aftermath of the Great Recession. It tracks the significant growth
and important structural changes in the financial sector during the
past few decades, both of which made the economy more vulnerable to
perceptions of risk in the markets. Halperin argues that
conventional economic models have lost relevance by failing to take
these developments into account appropriately, and also explains
that because of financial globalization we can no longer understand
what happens in the economies of major countries by relying on
"closed-economy" thinking. The book concludes with a list of policy
recommendations designed to increase the resilience of the
financial markets to negative economic developments and to reduce
incentives for risk taking, including a proposal to eliminate the
double taxation of dividends.
This book examines the role of uncertainty on financial decisions -
and, consequently, on financial markets - in the buildup to and
aftermath of the Great Recession. It tracks the significant growth
and important structural changes in the financial sector during the
past few decades, both of which made the economy more vulnerable to
perceptions of risk in the markets. Halperin argues that
conventional economic models have lost relevance by failing to take
these developments into account appropriately, and also explains
that because of financial globalization we can no longer understand
what happens in the economies of major countries by relying on
"closed-economy" thinking. The book concludes with a list of policy
recommendations designed to increase the resilience of the
financial markets to negative economic developments and to reduce
incentives for risk taking, including a proposal to eliminate the
double taxation of dividends.
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