When they are strong, democracy, human rights and
economic productivity tend to prevail.
Not exact matches
The U.S. economy is massive on a global scale, and much of the country's
economic capabilities can be traced back to the innovation, knowledge, and
productivity that
tends to be clustered in urban areas.
Such gaps
tend to narrow for a number of reasons, including higher marginal
productivity on cheaper labor and land costs in lower - tier cities, better
economic integration with government - led redistribution of infrastructure and public resources from regional hubs to small neighbor cities, and broader penetration of technology, including smartphones and the internet, according to the Morgan Stanley research.
Point is, doing a «like - for - like» replacement (subbing solar for coal, for example) and paying more for it is a decrease in
productivity, and thus would
tend to decrease overall
economic growth.