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                  MATHEMATICS AND SOCIETY 
                    The Nathan and Beatrice Keyfitz Lectures in Mathematics and 
                    the Social Sciences
                  Thursday April 15, 2010 
                    6:00 p.m. 
                    Robert C. Merton, Harvard Business School 
                    Observations on the Science of Finance in the Practice 
                    of Finance: Past, Present, and Future 
                   Bahen Center (BA), Room 1160
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                These lectures will be of interest to the university 
                  community as well as to individuals involved in public administration, 
                  economics, health policy, social and political science. The 
                  purpose of the series is both to inform the public of some of 
                  the ways quantitative methods are being used to design solutions 
                  to societal problems, and to encourage dialogue between mathematical 
                  and social scientists. All lectures are open to the public and 
                  everyone is welcome.  
                   
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                  Observations on the Science of Finance in the Practice 
                    of Finance: 
                    Past, Present, and Future 
                  
                    
                    For several decades, financial innovation has been a central 
                    force driving the global financial system toward greater efficiency 
                    with considerable economic benefit having accrued from those 
                    changes. The scientific breakthroughs in finance in this period 
                    both shaped, and were shaped by, the extraordinary innovations 
                    in finance practice that expanded opportunities for risk sharing, 
                    lowering transactions costs, and reducing information and 
                    agency costs. Today no major financial institution in the 
                    world, including central banks, can function without the computer-based 
                    mathematical models of modern financial science and the myriad 
                    of derivative contracts and markets used to extract price- 
                    and risk-discovery information as well as execute risk-transfer 
                    transactions. But also today, we are faced with the effects 
                    of a global financial crisis of a magnitude and scope not 
                    seen in nearly eighty years, which some attribute to the changes 
                    in the financial system brought about by financial innovation, 
                    derivatives, and mathematical models. The lecture will apply 
                    the tools of financial science to analyze and offer observations 
                    on the structural elements of financial crisis, on needed 
                    financial regulatory changes, and on the important role of 
                    financial innovation and science in the future beyond the 
                    crisis. 
                   
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            Robert C. Merton is currently the John and Natty McArthur 
              University Professor at the Harvard Business School. After receiving 
              a Ph.D. in Economics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
              in 1970, he served on the finance faculty of MIT's Sloan School 
              of Management until 1988 when he moved to Harvard. Professor Merton 
              is past President of the American Finance Association, a member 
              of the National Academy of Sciences, and a Fellow of the American 
              Academy of Arts and Sciences. He received the Alfred Nobel Memorial 
              Prize in the Economic Sciences in 1997.  
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