Innovation
in sentence
3014 examples of Innovation in a sentence
This global challenge also demands
innovation
in global governance, which is why we support the creation of a UN Environment Agency, endowed with the legal and financial resources needed to tackle the issues at hand.
And, while military
innovation
has been spectacular, it is still very labor-intensive.
Today, it is clear that reining in government also means finding ways to shape incentives so that
innovation
in government keeps pace with
innovation
in other service sectors.
Aside from the eurozone’s design flaws, the pressing items on Europe’s agenda concern competitiveness, jobs, innovation, and technology.
Europe’s first order of business should be to accept reality: the emerging economies are catching up in terms of
innovation
while the EU is losing traction, with China on the cusp of surpassing Europe as the second-largest hub for venture capital globally, behind only the United States.
A bankruptcy system that allows entrepreneurs to survive the inevitable failures that accompany innovation, as well as stronger protection of intellectual property and improved access to equity finance, are also needed.
As technological
innovation
causes per capita income to rise, people will need to work less to satisfy their needs.
Such a modern China would be a world leader in innovation, with a clean environment, a large middle class, and a much narrower gap between rural and urban growth, public services, and living standards.
They also underpin the myriad examples of policy
innovation
and civic engagement at the local level described by James Fallows in a recent article and upcoming book.
To promote state and local policy innovation, the federal government often assumes the role of venture capitalist, providing measurable goals and incentives, rather than dictating solutions.
Obama championed this approach through statewide competitions like the Department of Education’s Race to the Top program, through federal “social
innovation
grants” to support state and local governments, and through the Medicaid expansion program.
Two hundred years of breathtaking
innovation
since the dawn of the industrial age have produced rising living standards for ordinary people in much of the world, with no sharply rising trend for unemployment.
That is why the success of “Abenomics” hinges not on the short-term stimulus provided by aggressive monetary expansion and fiscal policies, but on a program of structural reform that increases competition and innovation, and that combats the adverse effects of an aging population.
But there is another, quieter revolution bringing companies from OECD countries to emerging markets: disruptive
innovation.
On one hand, emerging-market multinationals are excelling even in high-value-added and technology-intensive sectors; on the other hand, firms from OECD countries are increasingly re-importing
innovation
from emerging-market companies.
As a result, reverse
innovation
by OECD multinationals is now common practice.
Emerging-market countries will not only claim the lion’s share of global growth in the coming decade; they will also increasingly be the source of disruptive and frugal
innovation.
By 2020, the geography of innovation, in addition to that of the wealth of nations, will have undergone a massive rebalancing process.
Increased
innovation
and the rise of the services sector have helped China move beyond its role as the world’s factory to develop its own version of the Internet of Things, driven by platform companies like Alibaba and Tencent.
America’s culture of openness and
innovation
will ensure its role as a global hub in an age when networks supplement, if not fully replace, hierarchical power.
But, because productivity ultimately must be built on innovation, not just on ever more buildings and equipment, it was inevitable that returns on investment would turn south at some point.
United, the EU can play a critical global role, as it uniquely combines prosperity, democracy, environmentalism, innovation, and social justice.
Advocates of a strong and vibrant EU – and I am firmly among them – should be rooting for the insurgent parties to join forces with the weakened traditional social-democratic parties in order to promote sustainable development, innovation, and investment-led growth, and to block anti-EU coalitions.
The one hope humanity would have would lie in technological
innovation.
Yet such
innovation
– including the rapid progress in renewable energy over the last decade – has depended crucially on the relatively free flow of technologies across borders, not to mention China’s unique ability to scale up production and reduce costs quickly.
Clearly, the key features of Silicon Valley that foster
innovation
and entrepreneurship – a dense concentration of human talent, a competitive spirit, easy access to capital, and a supportive regulatory environment – can be replicated in and adapted to a wide variety of contexts.
Of course, not every country approaches
innovation
in the same way.
Though Rovio Entertainment’s release in 2009 of the popular video game Angry Birds catalyzed an
innovation
boom in Espoo, it is Aalto University – Finland’s equivalent of Stanford in California – that continues to fuel
innovation
in the area, by nurturing programmers, designers, and others with the necessary talents.
India is fortunate to have thought leaders in almost every sector who could help unleash such
innovation
in partnership with the civil service.
Hansen, in a 1934 paper, wrote that, “Secular stagnation is caused by the lack of new inventions or new industries”; and, as I show in my book Mass Flourishing: How Grassroots
Innovation
Created Jobs, Challenge, and Change, American
innovation
first began declining or narrowing as far back as the late 1960s.
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