Innovations
in sentence
759 examples of Innovations in a sentence
Information and communication technology is not costless magic; but it is closer to it than were the
innovations
of the electromechanical age.
Indeed, the social benefits of many real
innovations
(as opposed to the novel financial “products” that ended up unleashing havoc on the world economy) typically far exceed what their innovators receive.
Even here, multiple agencies can lead to beneficial
innovations
that can reduce the regulatory burden on institutions while maintaining effective levels of safety.
Private-sector flows will be vital to the entrepreneurship and
innovations
that must be at the heart of the new industrial revolution.
The longer it takes for these companies to recognize their systemic importance, the greater the likelihood of a more powerful backlash by governments and the public, hurting the companies and undermining their ability to continue producing
innovations
that genuinely boost consumers’ wellbeing.
This raises serious risks: as beneficial as Big Tech’s
innovations
are, they can also serve as important channels for state or non-state actors to bring about their own disruptions.
Beyond fueling a rise in outside monitoring, regulation, and supervision, there is the risk of a consumer backlash – or even the further exploitation of
innovations
by malicious actors.
We need to celebrate, advertise, and propagandize new
innovations
only when their success is questionable, before they have become widely accepted.
From the European Union to China, economies are vowing to reduce their energy intensity with the help of technological
innovations
and legislative changes.
Deregulation promised to spawn financial
innovations
that would enhance access to credit, enable greater portfolio diversification, and allocate risk to those most able to bear it.
Innovations
in biotechnology and farming methods are needed to deal with disease, pests, and drought.
Technical
innovations
like XML and print-on-demand make delivering the output technically feasible and inexpensive.
Well, such a mechanism would indeed reduce raters’ negative incentives to compete with one another to please issuers of securities, and to pursue
innovations
and improvements that enable raters to serve issuers better.
But it would strengthen raters’ positive incentives to compete with one another to produce accurate ratings, and to pursue
innovations
and improvements that enable raters to achieve that far more socially beneficial goal.
The area where genomics-driven
innovations
have attracted the most attention is health.
Some of the
innovations
associated with the sub-prime crisis – notably option-ARM’s, when extended to borrowers who couldn’t handle them – seem to have little redeeming value.
But others – those involved with the securitization of mortgages – were clearly important long-run innovations, because they can help spread risks better around the world.
Policymakers should also consider
innovations
used to help debt-burdened developing countries in the 1980’s and 1990’s.
Innovations
in one company would cascade across its entire industry by forcing competitors to raise their game.
China’s mobile-payment infrastructure – which already handles far more transactions than the third-party mobile-payment market in the United States – will become a platform for many more
innovations.
But such
innovations
have their limits.
Meanwhile,
innovations
in health care have already brought the world close to wiping out polio, and we expect to see dramatic results from a new triple drug therapy that could eradicate elephantiasis, which affects 120 million people.
The government should also pay attention to the development by private enterprises of new and competitive products, and support the scaling up of successful private-sector
innovations
in new industries.
Should this handoff occur, its beneficial impact in terms of delivering inclusive growth and genuine global stability would be turbocharged by the productive deployment of cash sitting on companies’ balance sheets, and by exciting technological
innovations
that began as firm/sector specific but are now having economy-wide effects.
And, if financial
innovations
like derivatives and short-term repurchase agreements have made markets more volatile and fragile, a Tobin tax could help to stabilize and strengthen them.
Innovators enjoy a high level of prosperity as the result of their
innovations.
After all, its institutional
innovations
apply only to the new Novo Mercado-listed companies, and not to the bulk of the Brazilian economy’s big firms, which are listed on the stock exchange’s main segment, and thus remain stuck with the old rules, old institutions, and an ineffective court system.
The
innovations
that the government encourages, such as drip irrigation or desalination, not only reduce the domestic cost of such shortages to, say, 70, but also underpin an industry that, by selling its wares in the most demanding markets, accrues a global value of more than 1,000.
European Myths, European RealitiesFollowing centuries of bold explorations in science, navigation and engineering, Continental Europe in the 20 th century launched major social
innovations.
Both the US and China could have vibrant tech sectors that benefit from each other’s
innovations.
Back
Next
Related words
Technological
Their
Which
Other
Could
Financial
Would
World
Technology
Global
Economic
People
Growth
While
Should
Policy
Health
Technologies
Countries
Important