Digital
in sentence
2581 examples of Digital in a sentence
In particular, developing economies can choose to take a forward-thinking approach that includes strengthening their
digital
foundations and actively encouraging AI adoption.
Europe’s Surprising Tech SuccessBRUSSELS – Europe is often viewed as a
digital
laggard, running far behind the frontier-pushing United States and Asia.
A related weakness is the lack of a true European single
digital
market.
To be sure, the European Commission promised to create a single
digital
market two years ago, estimating that it could boost the EU economy by €415 billion ($448.5 billion) annually.
Europe’s “single
digital
market,” they argue, currently amounts “to a jumble of outdated, corporatist, counterproductive industrial policies that favor producers over consumers, big companies over small, traditional incumbents over
digital
startups, and EU firms over foreign ones.”
Europe’s
digital
frontrunners are beginning to organize into a potent force, with 16 small EU countries, from Denmark to Ireland and Estonia, having formed a pro-Internet group.
Combating ISIS and similar groups will require a strategy for both battlefields – physical and
digital.
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) recently published a report, “Fintech and Sustainable Development: Assessing the Implications,” exploring how
digital
finance can be leveraged for environmental gains.
Fintech is part of a broader
digital
revolution, which also includes Big Data, the Internet of Things, blockchain, and artificial intelligence.
Countries worldwide should integrate
digital
finance into their sustainable-development financing plans.
Fortunately, this could well be the year that green
digital
finance comes of age.
With Germany’s
digital
start-ups stifled by overregulation and underinvestment, dinosaurs from the analogue world set the policy agenda.
Creating a
digital
single market makes sense.
Their main goal seems to be to constrain American
digital
platforms.
It should boost investment in broadband infrastructure and
digital
technologies.
And it should throw its weight behind a genuine EU
digital
single market that benefits consumers and enables startups to flourish, instead of a backdoor industrial policy that favors Germany’s
digital
flops.
While the forces fueling this trend – in particular, globalization and progress in
digital
technology – will be difficult to counter fully, their adverse effects can be mitigated through redistribution via the tax and social-security systems.
Against this backdrop, it is no surprise that the US Federal Reserve’s annual symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, last month focused on the dominance of
digital
platforms and the emergence of “winner-take-all” markets, not global debt.
This newfound awareness reflects the fact that it is intangible assets like
digital
software, not physical manufactured goods, that are driving the new phase of global growth.
The latter process converted data from an analog to a
digital
format.
By contrast, digitalization occurs when the adoption of
digital
technologies (and the accompanying mindset) leads to rapidly changing business models and value creation through network effects and new economies of scale.
Advanced technologies are uniting the material, digital, and biological worlds and creating innovations at a speed and scale unparalleled in human history.
To give young people the tools they will need to thrive in the changing
digital
economy, such investment must focus on improving the quality of education.
Third, a timetable for the completion of single-market liberalizing reforms – notably for service industries and the
digital
economy – would be established.
Meanwhile, global efforts to slow climate change, promote trade, set new rules for the
digital
age, and prevent or contain outbreaks of infectious diseases are inadequate.
South Africa is home to several well-established, innovative banks that are well placed to offer low-cost,
digital
services to millions of currently unbanked African households and businesses.
Another, related challenge concerns resource mobilization: countries need funds to invest in infrastructure, human capital, and the creation of trade and
digital
links within and beyond Africa.
For starters, in the context of the modern era’s “Fourth Industrial Revolution” – which Klaus Schwab of the World Economic Forum defines as a fusion of technologies blending the physical, digital, and biological spheres – it is tempting to assess which technologies could be the next printing press.
Rapid technological progress, particularly the rise of
digital
technology and artificial intelligence, is transforming how our economies and societies function.
Thanks to Aadhaar, more than a half-billion people have connected their
digital
IDs directly to a bank account, allowing the government to deposit over $12 billion without the risk of fraud, theft, or – especially important for women – the male drinking and domestic violence that frequently accompanies sudden infusions of cash.
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