Innovation
in sentence
3014 examples of Innovation in a sentence
Although Silicon Valley created new industries and improved the pace of
innovation
for a short time, it, too, has run up against diminishing returns.
To revive innovation, we need to change how business is done.
Unfortunately, this has not been Trump’s focus so far: he has rarely mentioned innovation, and his team is considering a dangerous approach that could actually undermine it.
For starters, Trump blames trade, rather than lost innovation, for the plight of US workers.
This suggests that lost innovation, not trade, is the main culprit.
This will clog the economy’s arteries, most likely preventing far more
innovation
than it stimulates among the established insiders.
Such an approach to today’s economic stagnation and deprivation threatens to drive a silver spike into the heart of
innovation
– and the American working class.
Yes, the Bundesbank fiercely opposed the ECB’s conditional support of debt-distressed eurozone members and backed legal challenges to Draghi’s innovation, the outright monetary transactions (OMT) scheme.
Exploding demand in developing economies and a wave of
innovation
in materials, manufacturing processes, and information technology are driving today’s new possibilities for manufacturing.
Even as the share of manufacturing in global GDP has fallen – from about 20% in 1990 to 16% in 2010 – manufacturing companies have made outsize contributions to innovation, funding as much as 70% of private-sector R&D in some countries.
“Maker spaces” – shared production facilities built around a spirit of open
innovation
– are proliferating.
The demand for better goods (and services) to meet our needs seems to be boundless, driving science and
innovation.
When China’s labor-intensive industries emerge from their metamorphosis, we should expect to see firms that are larger, that invest more in product
innovation
and design, and that hold more sway over business and trade policies.
In the Commission’s third scenario, a healthy Internet provides unprecedented opportunities for
innovation
and economic growth.
The Commission concluded that sustaining unhindered
innovation
will require that the Internet’s standards are openly developed and available; that all users develop better digital “hygiene” to discourage hackers; that security and resilience be at the core of system design (rather than an afterthought, as they currently are); that governments not require third parties to compromise encryption; that countries agree not to attack the Internet’s core infrastructure; and that governments mandate liability and compel transparent reporting of technological problems to provide a market-based insurance industry to enhance the IOT’s security.
A buyer who put the engine to work in, say, a textile factory could think of his profit stream as a just reward for having taken the risk of purchasing the machine and for the
innovation
of coupling it to a spinning jenny or a mechanical loom.
To that end, African states must identify ways to access the necessary funding; design mechanisms to support the implementation of flagship programs; strengthen their institutions’ capacity to tackle climate risks; and seize opportunities in low-carbon development in the fields of energy, technological innovation, and “green” industries.
Furthermore, incumbent business interests in developing countries, unlike their counterparts in the developed world, tend to lack the power to block
innovation.
By decarbonizing the global economy and limiting climate change, world leaders can unleash a wave of innovation, support the emergence of new industries and jobs, and generate vast economic opportunities.
Only this time, the
innovation
is not technical, but financial.
Another crucial
innovation
has been the development of the European Stability Mechanism, which, like the International Monetary Fund, has the capacity to execute vast financial bailouts, subject to conditionality.
Similarly, if technological
innovation
can now transform major industries in a matter of a few years, or even months, long-term investment makes less sense than it did before.
The fourth problem is that European countries’ fiscal policies do not emphasize creativity and innovation, which benefits not only from a conducive regulatory environment, but also from high-quality education and infrastructure.
But they should not discount the valuable lessons offered by advanced-country central banks’ recent monetary-policy
innovation.
Competition means the free development of alternatives and the competition of alternatives with one another, and of course in the process of this competition, the production by innovation, by inventiveness, by alternatives and new proposals.
The continent’s agricultural sector is further hindered by low skills, a dearth of innovation, weak infrastructure, little funding, and lack of access to land, land titles, and lender security.
Aside from ignorance of the Lisbon Strategy among the public and inaction on long-term reforms among the member states, a second problem concerns the lack of acceptance of the virtues of competition – the most effective way to ensure quality, innovation, and low prices for consumers.
They want the
innovation
that an open society generates, but without the intellectual freedom that defines it.
The first is the creation of the
innovation
fund to support early research.
This kind of basic research is where medical
innovation
starts, and the sums involved need not be huge to make a significant difference.
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