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It was then, as fat raindrops fell unseasonably from a sullen sky, that we headed for the lighthouse that stands where the flat sand-and-pine Landes coast to the north suddenly turns into the Basque coast’s unruly jumble of jagged rocks and cliffs, fringed by beaches as lovely as any in France, as it twists and turns its way a short distance south into Spain.
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"They don't have the ability, the strength, the money. Most importantly, they don't have the will. They just want to protect their seats," Kiptanui said, echoing the thoughts of other coaches, agents and former runners who spoke to Reuters about doping.
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Crosby would be the second major industrial deal for KKR this year. In March, New York-based KKR agreed to buy pumps and compressors maker Gardner Denver Inc for $3.9 billion, a deal that closed in July.
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The preceding argument did not assume that people would be irrational or suffer from money illusion. The next one does, but I think that it's a plausible view. That is, zero inflation in an economy that grows as slowly as the American economy now grows would mean either significant nominal wage cuts or unemployment. For example, the real wage of college professors fell by 30 percent between 1970 and 1980. Had we been in a 2 percent inflation era, real wages would have fallen by only 20 percent. What would have happened? Scholars over age 35 probably would have kept their jobs. I suspect that those under 35 would have fallen victim to lower staffing requirements if real wages had not been able to fall. Would nominal wages have started to fall if the inflation rate had been low? Perhaps, but not as easily as in an inflationary environment. Certainly the standard tenure provision in university contracts draws sharp distinction between nominal declines and real declines. Eventually that could get itself renegotiated,but it would take a long time.