Innovation
in sentence
3014 examples of Innovation in a sentence
In China, the one-party system has been effective in delivering strong growth, but it must now address the rampant corruption and excessive bureaucracy that has crowded out the private sector and limited creativity and
innovation.
But in an era when technological
innovation
is once again outpacing education, the effort to provide everybody with an opportunity to learn must not only be redoubled; it must also be retooled for an increasingly unstable and volatile world.
Today,
innovation
rarely results from individuals working in isolation; far more often than not, it is the product of sharing and collaboration.
In fact, since the Industrial Revolution, efficiency through
innovation
has revolutionized just a handful of core energy-conversion inventions: the internal combustion engine, the electric motor, the light bulb, the gas turbine, the steam engine, and, more recently, the electronic circuit.
Syriza's main
innovation
has been to capitalize on the urgent need for change in Greece by portraying the parties it has ousted as somehow aligned with the county's enemies, including the EU.
While market-oriented reforms are necessary, government has a key role to play in providing a social safety net for the poor; maintaining high-quality public services; investing in education, training, health care, infrastructure, and innovation; enforcing competition policies that constrain the power of economic and financial oligopolies; and ensuring genuine equality of opportunity for all.
We have heard many stories of patients whose lives were affected by this digital-health innovation; one in particular sticks with us.
In Ghana, our organizations partnered with entities like Columbia University, the Millennium Promise Alliance, Ericsson, and Airtel, combining local and international knowledge about health-care
innovation
with the ability to take on financial risk.
Notwithstanding the unfinished business of consumer-led rebalancing, China now appears to be embracing yet another shift in its core economic strategy – driven by a broad array of “supply-side initiatives” that range from capacity reduction and deleveraging to
innovation
and productivity.
America’s rapid switch to natural gas is the result of three decades of technological innovation, particularly the development of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” which has opened up large new resources of previously inaccessible shale gas.
As shown in a study by the Breakthrough Institute, fracking was built on substantial government investment in technological
innovation
for three decades.
Climate economists repeatedly have pointed out that such energy
innovation
is the most effective climate solution, because it is the surest way to drive the price of future green energy sources below that of fossil fuels.
SMEs are open to innovation, technology transfer, and industrialization.
Improvement in US performance on climate change will have to come from
innovation
and increased energy efficiency.
They also highlight the knock-on benefits that taking quick action on climate change could have, including reduction of local pollution, greater energy and food security, and faster
innovation.
While Russia needs to integrate itself with Europe’s remaining islands of
innovation
(Germany, above all), it is the growth potential of the Asia-Pacific region that will determine the country’s future.
We at the World Economic Forum have dubbed this wave of
innovation
the “Fourth Industrial Revolution,” because it is fundamentally changing the way we live, work, and relate to one another.
BELLEVUE, WASHINGTON – Everyone wants to know how to build the next Silicon Valley: an
innovation
hub that draws talent and capital, and that creates jobs, companies, and whole new industries.
Demand for
innovation
in specific areas of technology has been the common force behind all high-tech hot spots, as well as the most important inventions.
That makes state-sponsored demand a very efficient mechanism for generating
innovation.
Because of the multiplier effect, small governments and states, and even large cities, can successfully sponsor the kind of demand that fosters a world-class
innovation
epicenter.
But they have forgotten how it all started: guaranteed demand, which stimulates the most ambitious kind of
innovation.
But his assessment of the relationship between basic research and technological
innovation
– in short, that “‘basic science’ isn’t nearly as productive of new inventions as we tend to think”– misses the mark.
Venture capital, biopharmaceutical, and other high-tech industries, he pointed out, “cluster about major research centers” precisely because “basic science drives innovation.”
Former US Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, on the other hand, warns that such a tax would impede
innovation.
The discovery of a new superconductor with enhanced properties could lead to even greater technological
innovation.
Even if the effort is only partly successful, the money saved is likely to encourage further
innovation.
It combines the best of what the private sector has to offer, including capital, technology, innovation, and efficiency, with the best of what the public sector has to offer, such as legislation and regulation for safeguarding global public goods.
But there is a third, more competitive option: a “blue” economy driven by business-level innovation, rather than top-down policies.
The blue economy – a concept developed by the Belgian economist Gunter Pauli – is powered less by investment and more by innovation, with a focus on creating jobs, building social capital, and generating multiple cash flows by stimulating entrepreneurship and the development of new business models.
Back
Next
Related words
Technological
Growth
Which
Economic
Their
Global
Technology
Investment
Would
Financial
Research
Development
Countries
About
There
Should
World
Economy
Market
Could