Innovative
in sentence
1212 examples of Innovative in a sentence
But, if social media platforms were reconfigured in
innovative
ways, they could have the opposite impact, creating spaces for citizens from diverse backgrounds to interact.
Taking these developments a step further, the Precision Medicine Initiative, launched in the US last year, is pursuing
innovative
trials of targeted drugs for adult and pediatric cancers, introducing customized combination therapies, and honing its understanding of drug resistance.
Moreover, by providing detailed information on biodiversity and the interactions within ecosystems, genomics is driving the development of
innovative
environmental-protection strategies.
And that will not change without adequate – and
innovative
– financial regulation.
The Third Plenum aims to digest China’s experiences, as well as international best practices, in order to forge a consensus for a coherent reform strategy that fosters an inclusive, innovative, and sustainable growth order.
This time, moreover, the burden will not fall on one country alone, and a broader mix of traditional and
innovative
sources of financing are already available to help fund the required investment programs in energy efficiency and renewables.
An
innovative
strategy under discussion in Washington, DC, is linked to corporate-tax reform – a priority for President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans.
This advances the objective of helping local businesses, particularly
innovative
small and medium-size firms, to grow and thrive.
If, instead of investing in the Standard & Poor index of 500 largest companies quoted on Wall Street, an investor put his savings in small, and often more innovative, companies (the so-called "small caps"), his return would have gone up in the last 50 years by 6% – i.e. by a mere15% over the return on ultra-safe government securities.
I believe that China’s
innovative
model for development is likely to help it weather both the gathering economic crisis and any resulting social and political unrest.
It is time for policymakers to recognize that
innovative
international policy cooperation is not a luxury; sometimes – like today – it is a necessity.
They will need to create
innovative
products, penetrate new markets, and make bold investments in equipment, technology, and talent, while simultaneously scrutinizing every aspect of their operations for inefficiency and waste.
With 50 companies already committing $70 million to fund education for Syrian refugees, we have shown that the most entrepreneurial and
innovative
companies can be partners in peace.
Lower borrowing costs would also boost China’s capital market, which is critical to provide equity financing to
innovative
small and medium-size businesses.
Republican Congressman David Camp, who is leading the legislative effort in the House of Representatives, has proposed an
innovative
alternative that rests on the “destination principle”: MNCs’ taxable earnings should be based largely on where their products are sold, rather than on where the companies are headquartered, where their production and financing occur, or where their profits are reported.
Another
innovative
solution, which may work in some areas, is Switzerland’s “G permit” scheme, available to foreigners who live in a border zone in their home country and work in a border zone in Switzerland.
Confucian-inspired intellectuals like Jiang Qing, for example, have put forward an
innovative
proposal for a tricameral legislature.
It is intriguing to contemplate China embracing some sort of
innovative
democratic experiment, combining tricameralism with deliberative democracy methods to mold a new separation of powers – and thus a new type of political accountability.
But, as Bruce Katz and Luise Noring have documented, in many cities in America and around the world, elected officials, civic organizations, and private business often unite beyond party lines to design and find funding for
innovative
projects in public transport, housing, or economic development.
In fact, most children living in developing Commonwealth countries could benefit from an
innovative
solution designed by the International Commission on Financing Global Education Opportunity, where we serve as commissioners.
The new bank should maximize its multiplier effects by sharing and reducing risk through collective action and “crowding in” other financing; by setting a powerful example in adopting
innovative
and cost-effective approaches; and through its policy and institutional impact beyond projects that it finances.
The term “capitalism” used to mean an economic system in which capital was privately owned and traded; owners of capital got to judge how best to use it, and could draw on the foresight and creative ideas of entrepreneurs and
innovative
thinkers.
There are too many entry barriers to the poor, the innovative, and those without access to credit.
Given that a country’s problems are rarely unique,
innovative
solutions can spawn globally competitive – even dominant – industries.
Instead of sinking massive amounts of money into poorly performing school systems, Latin American governments would undoubtedly be interested in
innovative
solutions, such as tablet-based textbooks, that can help teachers provide effective lessons, monitor their students’ progress, and identify remediation strategies.
Such
innovative
initiatives represent important progress.
To be sure, an
innovative
initiative to ensure educational access for these children – a two-shift school program that uses the same classrooms as Lebanese children – frees up valuable space and materials, making it possible to deliver an education for only about $600 per pupil.
At the same time, inefficient, wasteful, and incompetent companies – especially those that are generating high levels of pollution, depleting natural resources, and creating excess capacity – should be encouraged to exit the market, with modern and
innovative
companies taking their place.
Given this, China’s leaders should focus not only on channeling funding toward
innovative
industries; they must also ramp up their efforts to weed out excess capacity and energy-inefficient activity in the state-owned sector.
As a latecomer to urbanization, India will benefit from technological innovations – including digital technologies, cleaner energy,
innovative
construction materials, and new modes of transport – that will enable it to leapfrog some of its more developed counterparts.
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