Digital
in sentence
2581 examples of Digital in a sentence
It’s an old-fashioned form of gendered power dynamics updated for the
digital
age.
For already-established female journalists, this
digital
distancing may not be such a big deal.
When I discussed this issue with several senior, predominantly male industry leaders, most were shocked to hear that their female colleagues felt so threatened in the
digital
space.
Another colleague did not think her experience of
digital
violence would be taken seriously, because it had not happened in the “real world.”
And yet, as any female journalist knows,
digital
combat leaves scars, too.
In fact, China’s dictatorship has become even more entrenched in recent years, as the Communist Party of China has used
digital
technologies to build a surveillance state.
The new
digital
landscape is still taking shape, and countries have an opportunity to redefine their comparative advantages.
The US may have lost out as the world chased low labor costs; but it operates from a position of strength in a world defined by
digital
globalization.
The simple fact is that, thanks to everything from efficient and safe shipping lanes to
digital
technology and the Internet, a large pool of cheap labor is available to global producers.
Eurozone countries’ social policies have blunted the distributional impact of job and income polarization fueled by globalization, automation, and
digital
technologies.
And, third,
digital
technologies began to have an ever-larger impact on economic structures, jobs, and global supply chains, which significantly altered global employment patterns, and accelerated the pace of routine-job loss.
Over the last 15 years, in particular, increasingly powerful
digital
technologies enabled the automation and disintermediation of “routine” white- and blue-collar jobs.
The rise of
digital
technologies also boosted companies’ ability to manage complex multi-source global supply chains efficiently, and thus take advantage of global economic integration.
While globalization and
digital
technologies have produced broad-based benefits, in the form of lower costs for goods and an expanded array of services, they have also fueled job and income polarization, with a declining share of middle-income jobs and a rising share of lower- and higher-income jobs splitting the income distribution.
Journalism needs people skilled in technology to lead investigative reporting projects and to manage the industry’s
digital
transition.
Beyond these areas, Macron wants to boost innovation in the
digital
sphere, by establishing a European version of the United States’ Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
At the same time, he wants to protect national sovereignty in the
digital
age through regulations and a common fiscal approach.
Restoring Competition in the
Digital
EconomyMUNICH – The
digital
economy is carving out new divides between capital and labor, by allowing one firm, or a small number of firms, to capture an increasingly large market share.
Two forces in today’s
digital
economy are driving the global decline in labor’s share of total income.
The first is
digital
technology itself, which is generally biased toward capital.
The second force is the
digital
economy’s “winner-takes-most” markets, which give dominant firms excessive power to raise prices without losing many customers.
Today’s superstar companies owe their privileged position to
digital
technology’s network effects, whereby a product becomes even more desirable as more people use it.
These factors help to explain why the
digital
economy has given rise to large firms that have a reduced need for labor.
But confronting it will require us to reinvent antitrust for the
digital
age.
The network may coordinate investigations and enforcement decisions and develop new guidelines for how to monitor market power and collusive practices in a
digital
economy.
But the G20 now needs to expand its scope, by recognizing that
digital
technologies are creating market outcomes that, if unchecked by a new World Competition Network, will continue to favor multinational firms at the expense of workers.
While GDP measures the market value of all goods and services produced within a country, many stars of the
digital
age (think Wikipedia, Facebook, Twitter, Mozilla, Netscape, and so on) produce no goods and provide free services.
Indeed, instead of responding to China's
digital
rise, the European Union has remained fixated on the global success of American platforms like Amazon, Facebook, and Google, even threatening punitive actions against them.
But there is mounting evidence that the real competitive challenge for Europe will come from the East, especially China, which is taking a protectionist and expansionist approach to securing its future
digital
dominance.
To be sure, China still lags far behind the US, with its 79 unicorns, in the
digital
sphere.
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