15 results on '"Xepapadeas, Anastasio"'
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2. The effects of climate change on a small open economy
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Economides, George and Xepapadeas, Anastasio
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climate change ,E50 ,new Keynesian models ,ddc:330 ,Q50 ,monetary policy ,E10 - Abstract
We investigate the impact of climate change on the macroeconomic performance of a small open economy. The setup is a new Keynesian dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model of a small open economy without monetary policy independence in which a climate module that interacts with the economy has been incorporated. The model is solved numerically using common parameter values, fiscal data and projections about temperature growth from the Greek economy. Our results, suggest that climate change implies a significant output loss and a dramatic deterioration of competitiveness.
- Published
- 2019
3. Editorial Introduction.
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Swanson, Timothy and Xepapadeas, Anastasio
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PREFACES & forewords ,SUPPLY & demand - Abstract
The article discusses various reports published within the issue including one by R. Martinez-Espineira on the demand for water and another by Nauges and Thomas on the estimation of water demand relationships.
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- 2003
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4. Robust control of parabolic stochastic partial differential equations under model uncertainty
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Athanasios N. Yannacopoulos, Ioannis Baltas, Anastasios Xepapadeas, Baltas, Ioanni, Xepapadeas, Anastasio, and Yannacopoulos, Athanasios N.
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Mild solutions ,0209 industrial biotechnology ,Spatiotemporal control ,MathematicsofComputing_NUMERICALANALYSIS ,02 engineering and technology ,symbols.namesake ,Engineering (all) ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Saddle point ,Bellman equation ,ComputingMethodologies_SYMBOLICANDALGEBRAICMANIPULATION ,Differential game ,Mild solution ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Applied mathematics ,Robust optimal control ,Mathematics ,Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman-Isaacs equation ,Hilbert space ,General Engineering ,Optimal control ,Stochastic partial differential equation ,Elliptic partial differential equation ,symbols ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Robust control - Abstract
The present paper is devoted to the study of robust control problems of parabolic stochastic partial differential equations under model uncertainty. To be more precise, the robust control problem under investigation is expressed as a stochastic differential game in a real separable infinite dimensional Hilbert space. By resorting to the theory of mild solutions, we prove that the elliptic partial differential equation associated with the problem at hand, also known as the Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman-Isaacs equation, admits a unique solution, which is the value function of the game. Furthermore, we investigate the problem of existence of an optimal control pair that satisfies a saddle point property. Finally, as a demonstration of the proposed approach, we apply our results to the study of a certain robust control problem arising in the spatiotemporal management of natural resources.
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- 2019
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5. Decision Making Under Model Uncertainty: Fréchet–Wasserstein Mean Preferences
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Anastasios Xepapadeas, Athanasios N. Yannacopoulos, Electra Petracou, Petracou, Electra V., Xepapadeas, Anastasio, and Yannacopoulos, Athanasios N.
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Class (set theory) ,Strategy and Management ,05 social sciences ,Ambiguity aversion ,Management Science and Operations Research ,Fréchet mean ,ambiguity aversion • Frechet mean preferences • Wasserstein metric • social discount rate • model uncertainty ,Wasserstein metric ,0502 economics and business ,Social discount rate ,050207 economics ,Mathematical economics ,050205 econometrics ,Mathematics - Abstract
This paper contributes to the literature on decision making under multiple probability models by studying a class of variational preferences. These preferences are defined in terms of Fréchet mean utility functionals, which are based on the Wasserstein metric in the space of probability models. In order to produce a measure that is the “closest” to all probability models in the given set, we find the barycenter of the set. We derive explicit expressions for the Fréchet–Wasserstein mean utility functionals and show that they can be expressed in terms of an expansion that provides a tractable link between risk aversion and ambiguity aversion. The proposed utility functionals are illustrated in terms of two applications. The first application allows us to define the social discount rate under model uncertainty. In the second application, the functionals are used in risk securitization. The barycenter in this case can be interpreted as the model that maximizes the probability that different decision makers will agree on, which could be useful for designing and pricing a catastrophe bond. This paper was accepted by Manel Baucells, decision analysis.
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- 2021
6. Robust portfolio decisions for financial institutions
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Athanasios N. Yannacopoulos, Anastasios Xepapadeas, Ioannis Baltas, Baltas, Ioanni, Xepapadeas, Anastasio, and Yannacopoulos, Athanasios N.
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Statistics and Probability ,Finance ,Bellman-isaacs equation ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Applied Mathematics ,Portfolio management ,Financial market ,Robust optimization ,Applied Mathematic ,Modeling and Simulation ,Differential game ,Stochastic differential game ,Portfolio ,Cash flow ,Project portfolio management ,Special case ,Robustness (economics) ,business - Abstract
The present paper aims to study a robust-entropic optimal control problem arising in the management of financial institutions. More precisely, we consider an economic agent who manages the portfolio of a financial firm. The manager has the possibility to invest part of the firm's wealth in a classical Black-Scholes type financial market, and also, as the firm is exposed to a stochastic cash flow of liabilities, to proportionally transfer part of its liabilities to a third party as a means of reducing risk. However, model uncertainty aspects are introduced as the manager does not fully trust the model she faces, hence she decides to make her decision robust. By employing robust control and dynamic programming techniques, we provide closed form solutions for the cases of the (i) logarithmic; (ii) exponential and (iii) power utility functions. Moreover, we provide a detailed study of the limiting behavior, of the associated stochastic differential game at hand, which, in a special case, leads to break down of the solution of the resulting Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman-Isaacs equation. Finally, we present a detailed numerical study that elucidates the effect of robustness on the optimal decisions of both players.
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- 2018
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7. Optimal Management of Ecosystem Services with Pollution Traps: The Lake Model Revisited
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Anastasios Xepapadeas, Dieter Grass, Aart de Zeeuw, Department of Economics, Research Group: Economics, Tilburg Sustainability Center, Grass, Dieter, Xepapadeas, Anastasio, and de Zeeuw, Aart
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Pollution ,Economics and Econometrics ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ecosystem service ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Structural basin ,01 natural sciences ,Lake ,Ecosystem services ,optimal control ,symbols.namesake ,Fast-slow dynamic ,lakes ,0502 economics and business ,multiple equilibria ,Econometrics ,050207 economics ,games ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Environmental engineering ,Game ,pollution trap ,Optimal control ,Optimal management ,Variable (computer science) ,Geography ,Nash equilibrium ,symbols ,ecosystem services ,fast-slow dynamics ,Welfare - Abstract
In this paper, optimal management of the lake model and common-property outcomes are reconsidered when the lake model is extended with the slowly changing variable. New optimal trajectories are found that were hidden in the simplified analysis. Furthermore, it is shown that two Nash equilibria may exist with the one leading to the steady state with a high level of ecological services dominating the other one. For larger initial states, only the Nash equilibrium with a low level of ecological services exists, which implies that the users of the lake can be trapped in the bad Nash equilibrium. Finally, it is shown that implementing the optimal phosphorus loadings from the simplified version into the full lake model can have considerable welfare losses, as the lake can end up in the wrong basin of attraction, but in most cases welfare losses are small because of the fast-slow dynamics.
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- 2017
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8. Climate engineering under deep uncertainty
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Johannes Emmerling, Anastasios Xepapadeas, Vassiliki Manoussi, Manoussi, Vassiliki, Xepapadeas, Anastasio, and Emmerling, Johannes
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Economics and Econometrics ,Control and Optimization ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,business.industry ,Applied Mathematics ,05 social sciences ,Robust control ,Solar radiation management ,Uncertainty ,Climate change ,Environmental economics ,Climate policy ,01 natural sciences ,Differential game ,13. Climate action ,Software deployment ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,050207 economics ,Climate engineering ,business ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Climate engineering, and in particular solar radiation management (SRM), is attracting increasing attention as a climate policy option. However, its potentially strategic nature and unforeseen side effects provide major policy and scientific challenges. We study the role of SRM in a two-country model with the notable feature of deep uncertainty modeled as model misspecification of SRM side effects. We find that deep uncertainty leads to a reduction in SRM deployment under both global cooperation and strategic Nash behavior, and that the effect is larger if countries act strategically. Furthermore, we demonstrate that if countries have different model confidence about SRM impacts, then the more confident country will engage more strongly in using SRM, leading this country to “free drive”.
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- 2018
9. Spatial externalities and agglomeration in a competitive industry
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William A. Brock, Anastasios Xepapadeas, Athanasios N. Yannacopoulos, Brock, William A., Xepapadeas, Anastasio, and Yannacopoulos, Athanasios N.
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Economics and Econometric ,Economics and Econometrics ,Control and Optimization ,Returns to scale ,Urban agglomeration ,Economies of agglomeration ,Applied Mathematics ,Production function ,Competitive equilibrium ,Social optimum ,Microeconomics ,Spatial externality ,Economics ,Marginal product ,Diminishing returns ,Endogenous agglomeration ,Externality ,Industrial organization - Abstract
We introduce spatial spillovers as an externality in the production function of competitive firms operating within a finite spatial domain under adjustment costs. Spillovers may attenuate with distance and the overall externality could contain positive and negative components with the overall effect being positive. We show that when the spatial externality is not internalized by firms, spatial agglomerations may emerge endogenously in a competitive equilibrium. The result does not require increasing returns at the private or the social level, increasing marginal productivity of private capital with respect to the externality, or location advantages. In fact agglomerations may emerge with decreasing returns to scale, declining marginal productivity of private capital with respect to the externality, and no location advantage. The result depends on the interactions between the structures of production technology and spatial effects as shown in the paper. No agglomerations emerge at the social optimum when spillovers are internalized and diminishing returns both from the private and the social point of view prevail. Numerical experiments with Cobb-Douglas and CES technologies and an isoelastic demand confirm our theoretical predictions. © 2014 Elsevier B.V.
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- 2014
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10. Valuing insurance services emerging from a gene bank: The case of the Greek Gene Bank
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Sofia Spyrou, Nikolaos Stavropoulos, Athanasios Tsivelikas, Parthenopi Ralli, Eva Kougea, Anastasios Xepapadeas, Vasiliki Tsiaousi, Xepapadeas, Anastasio, Ralli, Parthenopi, Kougea, Eva, Spyrou, Sofia, Stavropoulos, Nikolao, Tsiaousi, Vasiliki, and Tsivelikas, Athanasios
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Economics and Econometric ,Economics and Econometrics ,Gene bank ,Actuarial science ,Poisson arrival ,Valuation ,Conceptual framework ,Genetic resources ,Economics ,Triggering event ,Insurance value ,General Environmental Science ,Valuation (finance) - Abstract
We develop a conceptual framework for determining insurance values associated with a gene bank and we apply the methodology to the Greek Gene Bank (GGB), the largest ex situ conservation program in Greece. To evaluate the insurance value generated by the holdings of the GGB genetic resources, the current study examined scenarios for alternative arrival probabilities of an adverse event that would negatively affect production of seven major staple crops held at the GGB within the next 100. years. Within the range of our estimates, it is indicated that insurance values considerably exceed the current operating costs of maintaining the GGB. © 2013 Elsevier B.V.
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- 2014
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11. Instabilities and robust control in natural resource management
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Catarina Roseta-Palma, Anastasios Xepapadeas, Xepapadeas, Anastasio, and Roseta-Palma, Catarina
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Economics and Econometrics ,Multiple equilibria ,Uncertainty ,Robust control ,Robust harvesting rules ,Robust harvesting rule ,Natural resource management ,Optimal control ,Natural resource ,Supply and demand ,System dynamics ,Microeconomics ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Instabilities ,Economics ,Fisheries management ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Instabilitie ,Stock (geology) - Abstract
Most renewable natural resources exhibit marked demographic and environmental stochasticities, which are exarcebated in management decisions by the uncertainty regarding the choice of an appropriate model to describe system dynamics. Moreover, demand and supply analysis often indicates the presence of instabilities and multiple equilibria, which may lead to management problems that are intensified by uncertainty on the evolution of the resource stock. In this paper the fishery management problem is used as an example to explore the potential of robust optimal control, where the objective is to choose a harvesting rule that will work under a range of admissible specifications for the stock-recruitment equation. The paper derives robust harvesting rules leading to a unique equilibrium, which could be helpful in the design of policy instruments such as robust quota systems. info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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- 2013
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12. Spatial growth with exogenous saving rates
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Athanasios N. Yannacopoulos, Anastasios Xepapadeas, Xepapadeas, Anastasio, and Yannacopoulos, A. N.
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Economics and Econometrics ,Economics and Econometric ,Spatial growth ,Nonlinear diffusion ,Applied Mathematics ,05 social sciences ,Per capita income ,Microeconomics ,Capital accumulation ,Solow model ,Capital deepening ,0502 economics and business ,Per capita ,Economics ,Marginal product ,Econometrics ,Capital intensity ,Diminishing returns ,050207 economics ,Stock (geology) ,050205 econometrics - Abstract
Economic growth has traditionally been analyzed in the temporal domain, while the spatial dimension is captured by cross-country income differences. Data suggest great inequality in income per capita across countries, and a slight but noticeable increase in inequality across nations between 1960 and 2000. Seeking to explore the mechanism underlying the temporal evolution of the cross sectional distribution of economies, we develop a spatial growth model where saving rates are exogenous. Capital movements across locations are governed by a mechanism under which capital moves toward locations of relatively higher marginal productivity, with a velocity determined by the existing stock of capital. This augments the capital accumulation equation by a nonlinear diffusion term. Our results suggest that under diminishing returns, the growth process leads to a stable spatially nonhomogeneous distribution for per capita capital and income in the long run. Insufficient savings may lead to the emergence of persistent poverty cores where capital stock is depleted in some locations.
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- 2016
13. Social norms as solutions
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Stephen Polasky, Aart de Zeeuw, W. Neil Adger, Gretchen C. Daily, Anastasios Xepapadeas, Maja Schlüter, Kenneth J. Arrow, Nils Kautsky, Astrid Dannenberg, Carl Folke, Paul R. Ehrlich, Marten Scheffer, Scott Barrett, Stephen R. Carpenter, John M. Anderies, F. Stuart Chapin, Elke U. Weber, Ole Jacob Madsen, Brian Walker, Therese Lindahl, Karine Nyborg, Caroline Schill, Wander Jager, Anne-Sophie Crépin, Simon A. Levin, James E. Wilen, Nyborg, Karine, Anderies, John M., Dannenberg, Astrid, Lindahl, Therese, Schill, Caroline, Schlüter, Maja, Adger, W. Neil, Arrow, Kenneth J., Barrett, Scott, Carpenter, Stephen, Chapin, F. Stuart, Crépin, Anne Sophie, Daily, Gretchen, Ehrlich, Paul, Folke, Carl, Jager, Wander, Kautsky, Nil, Levin, Simon A., Madsen, Ole Jacob, Polasky, Stephen, Scheffer, Marten, Walker, Brian, Weber, Elke U., Wilen, Jame, Xepapadeas, Anastasio, De Zeeuw, Aart, Research Group: Economics, Department of Economics, and Tilburg Sustainability Center
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Aquatic Ecology and Water Quality Management ,WIMEK ,Multidisciplinary ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Global challenges ,Lead pollution ,010501 environmental sciences ,Aquatische Ecologie en Waterkwaliteitsbeheer ,Collective action ,Tipping point (climatology) ,01 natural sciences ,Group Processes ,Policy ,Incentive ,Action (philosophy) ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Social Norms ,Humans ,Life Science ,Business ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Law and economics - Abstract
Climate change, biodiversity loss, antibiotic resistance, and other global challenges pose major collective action problems: A group benefits from a certain action, but no individual has sufficient incentive to act alone. Formal institutions, e.g., laws and treaties, have helped address issues like ozone depletion, lead pollution, and acid rain. However, formal institutions are not always able to enforce collectively desirable outcomes. In such cases, informal institutions, such as social norms, can be important. If conditions are right, policy can support social norm changes, helping address even global problems. To judge when this is realistic, and what role policy can play, we discuss three crucial questions: Is a tipping point likely to exist, such that vicious cycles of socially damaging behavior can potentially be turned into virtuous ones? Can policy create tipping points where none exist? Can policy push the system past the tipping point?
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- 2016
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14. Climate engineering reconsidered
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Stephen Polasky, Karine Nyborg, Gretchen C. Daily, Rosamond L. Naylor, Paul R. Ehrlich, James E. Wilen, Terry P. Hughes, Alessandro Tavoni, Anastasios Xepapadeas, John M. Anderies, Aart de Zeeuw, Carl Folke, Marten Scheffer, F. Stuart Chapin, Timothy M. Lenton, Nils Kautsky, Antony Millner, Scott Barrett, Eric F. Lambin, Stephen R. Carpenter, Victor Galaz, Anne-Sophie Crépin, Barrett, Scott, Lenton, Timothy M., Millner, Antony, Tavoni, Alessandro, Carpenter, Stephen, Anderies, John M., Chapin III, F. Stuart, Crépin, Anne-Sophie, Daily, Gretchen, Ehrlich, Paul, Folke, Carl, Galaz, Victor, Hughes, Terry, Kautsky, Nil, Lambin, Eric F., Naylor, Rosamond, Nyborg, Karine, Polasky, Stephen, Scheffer, Marten, Wilen, Jame, Xepapadeas, Anastasio, De Zeeuw, Aart, Department of Economics, Research Group: Economics, and Tilburg Sustainability Center
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Carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere ,Meteorology ,business.industry ,Measure (physics) ,Climate change ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Atmospheric sciences ,Environmental science ,Geoengineering ,Climate engineering ,business ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,GE Environmental Sciences - Abstract
Stratospheric injection of sulphate aerosols has been advocated as an emergency geoengineering measure to tackle dangerous climate change, or as a stop-gap until atmospheric carbon dioxide levels are reduced. But it may not prove to be the game-changer that some imagine.
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- 2014
15. Optimal agglomerations in dynamic economics
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Athanasios N. Yannacopoulos, William A. Brock, Anastasios Xepapadeas, Brock, William A., Xepapadeas, Anastasio, and Yannacopoulos, Athanasios N
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Economics and Econometrics ,Economics and Econometric ,Returns to scale ,Urban agglomeration ,Economies of agglomeration ,Agglomeration ,Applied Mathematics ,jel:C61 ,Context (language use) ,Production function ,Social optimum ,Capital accumulation ,Monotone operator ,Rational expectations equilibrium ,Spatial spillover ,Marginal product ,Economics ,jel:R11 ,Mathematical economics ,Spillover induced instability ,Externality ,Agglomeration, Spatial Spillovers, Spillover Induced Instability, Rational Expectations Equilibrium, Social Optimum, Monotone Operators - Abstract
We study rational expectations equilibrium problems and social optimum problems in infinite horizon spatial economies in the context of a Ramsey type capital accumulation problem with geographical spillovers. We identify sufficient local and global conditions for the emergence (or not) of optimal agglomeration, using techniques from monotone operator theory and spectral theory in infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces. We show that agglomerations may emerge, with any type of returns to scale (increasing or decreasing) and with the marginal productivity of private capital increasing or decreasing with respect to the spatial externality. This is a fairly general result indicating the importance of the network structure of the spatial externality relative to the properties of the aggregate production function. Our analytical methods can be used to systematically study optimal potential agglomeration and clustering in dynamic economics. © 2014 Elsevier B.V.
- Published
- 2014
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