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Unleashing AI’s Potential: The Imperative of Creative Executive Leadership

N2Growth Blog

True creative executives transcend the constraints of traditional business paradigms. Future Outlook: Where AI and Executive Creativity Intersect With AI trends predicting a seismic shift in business dynamics, including a projected 21% net increase in the US GDP by 2030 , the role of creative executives becomes ever more pivotal.

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Beyond GDP, How the World's Economies Stack Up

Harvard Business Review

These days, many people agree that, just as the full measure of a man can't be taken by his banker, the full measure of a nation isn't reflected in its GDP. But what should take the place of that alpha metric as a better indicator of economic health? That resource is people and specifically, their optimism regarding entrepreneurship.

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How Competition Is Driving AI’s Rapid Adoption

Harvard Business Review

It finds that AI could (in aggregate and netting out competition effects and transition costs) deliver an additional $13 trillion to global GDP by 2030, averaging about 1.2% GDP growth a year across the period. The average effect on GDP depends on multiple factors. Why do laggards not jump into AI?

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What Has the Eurozone Learned from the Financial Crisis?

Harvard Business Review

But GDP fell so much that the actual effect was to push up the ratio of debt to GDP. But one cannot forget that policy in the Euro area is complex and subject to political constraints. Most experts now agree that these policies had such damaging and persistent negative effects on growth that they were self-defeating.

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Will Greece Survive the Crisis?

Harvard Business Review

GDP shrunk this year by 5.5% Our horrendous public debt is compounding and the public debt to GDP ratio will soon hit almost 200%, a level that can force our country to default on a most of what it owes. Consumption continues to drop. Construction has decreased by 40% and small shops are closing at a rapid rate.

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Turkey Badly Needs a Long-Term Plan for Syrian Refugees

Harvard Business Review

That’s one reason why Turkey’s GDP grew by 2.9% My research and the work of others suggest that targeted training programs, tax incentives, and steps to ease credit constraints could offset, at least partially, the financial cost of accommodating Syrian refugees, not to mention future social costs.

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Fixing the World's Infrastructure Problems

Harvard Business Review

of GDP (PDF) is necessary to raise infrastructure in the region to the standard of developed East Asian countries. Just to keep pace with anticipated global GDP growth, the world needs to spend $57 trillion , or on average $3.2 The UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean estimates that investment equivalent to 7.9%