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Innovation, Investment Criteria, and Economic Growth in Late-Industrializing Economies

Late-Industrializing Economies innovation and investment

By Dr. Kalim Siddiqui 

This study examines the effect of innovation on economic growth in the developing countries. Dr Kalim Siddiqui’s findings show that innovation significantly promotes growth, mediated by human capital and institutional capacity. Framed within endogenous growth theory and informed by Marxist critiques, the study highlights the importance of social relations, income distribution, and structural constraints, offering insights for policies that strengthen innovation systems and foster inclusive, sustainable development.

I. Introduction

Innovation serves as a primary catalyst for economic growth. Fundamentally, it enhances productivity, allowing more output to be generated from the same inputs. This rise in productivity directly expands the production of goods and services, thereby fuelling broader economic expansion and increases in GDP (Gross Domestic Product) per capita.

For emerging economies, innovation is a vital driver of development. It enhances competitiveness, stimulates job creation, raises incomes and exports, and supports sustainable growth by transforming knowledge into valuable new products, services, and processes. This dynamic of creative destruction replaces outdated methods with more productive alternatives. Countries and firms that innovate effectively strengthen their competitive position in both domestic and global markets, while those that fall behind risk obsolescence and the erosion of market share.

Every country must repeatedly decide which techniques to adopt, which sectors to prioritize, and how to allocate investment in ways that enhance long-run productive capacity.

Crucially, innovation extends beyond technological breakthroughs to include “soft” innovations such as new business models or the creative application of existing knowledge. The industries and enterprises that emerge from these innovations generate wealth and diverse employment opportunities, contributing positively to structural change—an essential process for developing countries. Moreover, targeted innovation in key sectors such as agriculture, healthcare, and services can open new economic pathways, lift populations out of poverty, and significantly enhance quality of life. Ultimately, by enabling countries to move up the global value chain and advancing objectives like the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), innovation provides the foundation for inclusive and sustainable long-term growth.

The process of innovation-driven economic growth is inseparable from the continuous choice of technology. Every country must repeatedly decide which techniques to adopt, which sectors to prioritize, and how to allocate investment in ways that enhance long-run productive capacity. Maurice Dobb’s analysis is rooted in the Soviet Union’s experience of rapid industrialization under comprehensive planning, offers one of the most influential frameworks for understanding these choices in late-developing economies. Dobb argued that the allocation of investment should be guided not by short-term profitability but by a criterion aimed at expanding workers’ productive power. In his view, a development strategy oriented toward social needs rather than market profitability allows an economy to attain higher levels of technological capability and long-term growth (Dobb, 1960).

Amartya Sen later engaged with Dobb’s approach, emphasizing similar principles in his discussions of optimal growth, social choice, and developmental priorities. For both authors, the central task of development policy is to create conditions that maximize the amount of capital available per worker and simultaneously improve the quality of labour through skills, education, and learning capacity. This combination—capital deepening and capability enhancement—forms the basis for sustained productivity growth (Dobb, 1960).

In the post-independence period, the adoption of import-substitution industrialization (ISI) strategies by the underdeveloped economies created fresh demand for technical skills, leading to the establishment of new colleges and training institutions to build a domestic skilled labour force. This strategy, however, encountered a fundamental constraint: low domestic incomes and per capita consumption limited the internal market for newly produced industrial goods. Consequently, these independent countries became reliant on exporting to Western markets to sustain industrial growth. From the 1980s onward, rising external debt crises in the Global South (developing countries) enabled Western governments and international financial institutions to impose neoliberal policies, intensifying this dependency on the Global North (Siddiqui, 2024a).

This dependency on the Global North (developed countries) extends into the realm of technology. The process of scientific and technological development in the Global South remains fundamentally oriented towards learning from and importing innovations from developed countries. Yet, technological advancement in the Global North has increasingly moved towards automation and capital-intensive production, which employs less labour. This trajectory is poorly suited to the abundant labour conditions of the Global South. The adoption of such imported capital-intensive technologies often leads to the displacement of unskilled and semi-skilled workers, exacerbating unemployment and undermining the core developmental goal of expanding productive employment.

In post-war Japan, large corporations frequently relied on networks of smaller enterprises, including cottage and small-scale industries, to produce ancillary components and parts. Crucially, this subcontracting system was not merely extractive. Leading firms—most notably the zaibatsu and later the keiretsu—provided smaller suppliers with access to credit, technical guidance, machinery, and managerial expertise. This created a dependent yet developmental relationship, in which the growth of large firms was closely linked to the upgrading of their suppliers’ capabilities. Over time, these arrangements enabled smaller enterprises to acquire advanced production skills, adopt modern technologies, and gradually move up the value chain. The system also fostered cumulative learning, as knowledge and innovation diffused through long-term, trust-based relationships, laying the foundation for Japan’s broader industrial modernization and high-quality manufacturing base (Siddiqui, 2024b).

South Korea followed a comparable, though uniquely structured, approach in its post-war industrialization. During the 1960s–1980s, the state directed credit and investment to priority sectors, while chaebol conglomerates, such as Samsung and Hyundai, were tasked with not only developing their own capabilities but also integrating smaller domestic firms into their supply chains. The government supported technology transfer through licensing arrangements and promoted R&D collaboration between lead firms and small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Importantly, these policies were combined with capacity-building measures, including technical education, vocational training, and the establishment of public research institutions that served as hubs for applied research. This created a structured pathway for domestic suppliers to gradually move up the value chain, acquiring technological know-how and innovation capacity along the way (Siddiqui, 2025a).

The state-directed development model in South Korea focused on building national champions—the chaebol—which in turn integrated domestic SMEs into tightly coordinated supply chains. Large conglomerates encouraged to source components locally wherever possible, while the government provided incentives for technology transfer, and skill development between lead firms and smaller suppliers. Similar to Japan, these subcontracting relationships were developmental rather than purely transactional: smaller firms gained access to technical knowledge, managerial practices, and capital equipment, allowing them to upgrade capabilities and move into higher-value production. The result was a dynamic ecosystem in which industrial growth and technological learning reinforced each other, contributing to South Korea’s rapid transformation from a largely agrarian economy to a globally competitive manufacturing hub.

The success of these Japan and South Korean economies reflects the operation of what scholars of innovation systems describe as national or sectoral innovation systems—complex networks of firms, research institutions, and government agencies that collectively generate, diffuse, and adapt knowledge. In Japan, the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) played a central role in coordinating industrial policy. It provided targeted guidance, subsidized technology acquisition, and encouraged long-term supplier–lead firm relationships through preferential financing and technical support programs. Keiretsu networks, in which large manufacturers maintained stable relationships with trusted suppliers and engaged in joint R&D, allowed incremental learning to diffuse systematically through domestic production networks.

Together, the Japanese and South Korean experiences illustrate a broader East Asian pattern in which developmental subcontracting and coordinated industrial policies created effective channels for domestic capability building. Unlike many countries in the Global South, where subcontracting often remains low-skill and extractive, these East Asian models demonstrate how targeted state intervention, firm-level learning, and structured supplier networks can combine to foster endogenous technological upgrading and sustained economic growth.

In other East Asian economies, subcontracting has played important role in industrial expansion. In countries such as Taiwan, and, to a lesser extent, Singapore and Hong Kong, the postwar period demonstrated the potential of carefully structured industrial linkages. Large firms in these economies did not merely outsource routine tasks; they engaged in coordinated relationships with smaller domestic suppliers, fostering learning, quality upgrading, and incremental innovation. These linkages created robust channels for technology transfer and skill development, enabling SMEs to participate actively in the modernization process.

By contrast, in much of the Global South, similar linkages with domestic firms have rarely served as effective conduits for meaningful technological learning. Subcontracting often remains transactional and limited to low-skill, low-value-added activities, leaving domestic suppliers outside the ambit of knowledge accumulation and innovation. This disparity underscores a critical need in the developing countries for deliberate industrial policies aimed at nurturing domestic technological capabilities. Such policies should prioritize the development and diffusion of technologies adapted to local conditions, factor endowments, and societal needs rather than relying primarily on foreign-owned, export-oriented multinational corporations. Learning from the East Asian experience, the Global South must consider mechanisms that integrate smaller domestic firms into production networks, provide incentives for upgrading, and encourage absorptive capacity development (Siddiqui, 2025b).

By situating industrial development within a deliberate industrial policy and a broader national innovation system, the East Asian experience shows that technology transfer on its own is not enough. Sustained economic growth emerges when learning becomes systematic, cumulative, and anchored in the development of domestic capabilities. For the Global South, this means moving beyond traditional strategies of importing technology and instead adopting policies that foster the structural and organizational foundations of endogenous innovation—foundations that can deliver productivity gains and support competition in increasingly sophisticated global markets.

II. Technological Innovation under Colonial Regimes

Technological innovation under colonial regimes was neither neutral nor emancipatory; it was fundamentally shaped by the imperatives of domination, extraction, plunder, and control of the resources. While colonial powers often claimed to be agents of progress and modernization, the technologies they introduced into colonised territories were designed primarily to serve metropolitan interests rather than to promote endogenous development or social well-being within the colonies themselves. Innovation, in this context, functioned as an instrument of empire rather than as a vehicle for inclusive advancement.

Colonial technologies were selectively introduced to enhance the efficiency of resource extraction and the administration of imperial rule. Infrastructure such as railways, ports, and telegraph systems is frequently cited as evidence of colonial development. However, these systems were overwhelmingly oriented toward connecting resource-rich interiors to coastal export hubs, facilitating the movement of raw materials to European markets. They rarely aimed to integrate local economies, improve intra-regional mobility, or meet the social and economic needs of indigenous populations. As a result, technological development followed extractive logics, reinforcing patterns of dependency that persist in postcolonial economies.

Moreover, colonial regimes systematically restricted technological knowledge and skills from diffusing into colonised societies. Advanced technical expertise remained concentrated in European hands, while indigenous populations were largely confined to manual or low-skilled roles. Educational systems were deliberately structured to produce clerks and intermediaries rather than engineers, scientists, or innovators capable of autonomous technological advancement. This deliberate underdevelopment of local technical capacity ensured that colonies remained reliant on metropolitan centres for both knowledge and machinery.

Colonial innovation also functioned as a mechanism of surveillance and coercion. Technologies such as mapping, census-taking, and later biometric identification were employed to classify, monitor, and control colonised populations. Scientific and technological practices were embedded within racial hierarchies, often legitimising colonial rule through pseudo-scientific claims of European superiority. In this way, technology did not merely extract value from colonised lands; it actively structured systems of governance that dehumanised and disciplined colonial subjects.

Importantly, colonial regimes frequently suppressed or devalued indigenous technological systems and knowledge traditions. Agricultural practices, medical knowledge, and craft industries developed over centuries were dismissed as backward or unscientific, despite their ecological sustainability and social relevance. In many cases, colonial policies actively dismantled local industries—most notably textile production in India—to eliminate competition with European manufacturing. Thus, colonial “innovation” often entailed the destruction of existing productive systems rather than their improvement.

The long-term consequences of these technological arrangements are profound. Postcolonial states inherited infrastructures designed for extraction, not development, alongside economies structurally dependent on exporting raw materials (Siddiqui, 2020) and importing finished goods. The absence of robust technological ecosystems and research institutions is not a failure of postcolonial governance alone but a direct outcome of colonial policies that systematically prevented technological sovereignty.

In fact, technological innovation under colonial regimes was deeply asymmetrical. It advanced the wealth, power, and industrial capacity of imperial centres while constraining the technological horizons of colonised societies. Rather than fostering universal progress, colonial innovation entrenched global inequalities by ensuring that technological advancement remained a privilege of the colonisers, leaving behind legacies of dependency that continue to shape the contemporary global order (Siddiqui, 2024c)

Historically, this transformation in the Global South involved the destruction of handicraft industries, seen as a necessary prelude to establishing modern industrial capacity. Under British colonial rule, however, artisans who lost their trades and traditional skills faced a markedly different fate than their European counterparts (Siddiqui, 2024d).

Apologists for colonialism frequently advance the argument that societies should “forget the past and focus on the present.” At face value, this claim appears to promote reconciliation and progress. However, such appeals are neither neutral nor benign. Rather, they function as a political strategy designed to protect historical privilege and silence legitimate claims for justice. In effect, this argument translates into an implicit message: “we have already achieved what we sought through colonial domination; therefore, do not confront us with the moral consequences of our actions, and abandon your demands for redress.”

For colonised societies, forgetting the past is not a simple act of closure; it is tantamount to erasing the future. The past is not merely a record of suffering but also a repository of aspirations, hopes, and motivations for building alternative futures. Historical memory provides the basis upon which claims for justice, reparations, and structural transformation are articulated. To demand forgetting, therefore, is to delegitimise these aspirations and to foreclose the possibility that historical injustices might be addressed meaningfully in the future. In this sense, the call to “move on” effectively dismisses the collective hopes and political agency of entire colonised nations, while affirming the outcomes desired by colonisers and occupying powers.

Moreover, such rhetoric requires the systematic erasure of historical crimes. These include slavery, settler colonialism, the large-scale plunder of resources across the Global South, and, more recently, military interventions and invasions such as those in Iraq, Libya and Syria, alongside persistent interference in the political and economic affairs of former colonies. Forgetting the past thus becomes a prerequisite for maintaining contemporary forms of domination, allowing European and broader Western power to continue largely uninterrupted and unaccountable. In other words, it is an invitation to proceed exactly as before, reproducing the same hierarchies under the guise of progress and modernity.

This selective amnesia operates as a weapon of the powerful. Those who have benefitted most from colonialism and its afterlives are precisely those who call for forgetting, as memory poses a threat to the status quo. Historical accountability would necessitate questioning existing global inequalities, wealth distributions, and power structures that remain deeply shaped by colonial extraction and violence.

Finally, the claim that colonialism brought innovation and development to colonised societies collapses under closer scrutiny. While technological advancements were indeed introduced, they were neither designed nor deployed for the benefit of the colonies themselves. Instead, innovation under colonial rule was primarily instrumental, aimed at facilitating extraction, control, and profit. Advanced technologies remained firmly under European control and later that of the Global North, reinforcing dependency rather than fostering autonomous development. Colonialism, therefore, did not cultivate genuine innovation within colonised societies; it systematically obstructed it.

Taken together, the injunction to forget the past is not a forward-looking proposition but a deeply conservative one. It seeks to preserve existing global inequalities by denying the historical processes that produced them, thereby undermining both justice in the present and the possibility of a more equitable future.

Taken together, the injunction to forget the past is not a forward-looking proposition but a deeply conservative one.

The debate between Niall Ferguson and Pankaj Mishra concerns colonialism, Western civilization, and the interpretation of global history. It escalated after Mishra’s review of Ferguson’s Civilization, in which he characterized Ferguson’s arguments as “Stoddardesque” and suggested racialized assumptions. This exchange developed into a public controversy involving legal threats and mutual accusations. Ferguson defended his work by rejecting racial determinism and emphasizing the institutional achievements of Western societies. Mishra, however, argued that Ferguson’s framework marginalized the violence and exploitation of empire and privileged Western narratives of progress. In From the Ruins of Empire, Mishra advances an alternative perspective by highlighting Asia’s intellectual and political responses to colonial domination. The dispute thus reflects broader tensions between celebratory accounts of Western modernity and critiques that foreground the experiences of the colonized world. The debate thus reflects a broader historiographical divide between institutionalist defences of Western modernity and postcolonial critiques that foreground imperial power and colonial experience (Mishra, 2013).

III. Literature Review

Maurice Dobb states that the choice of technique is inseparable from the broader allocation of investment between consumer-goods industries and heavy or capital-goods industries. Drawing on the Soviet experience of the 1930s, he underscored that backward economies must prioritize sectors that generate technological capabilities, intermediate inputs, and capital equipment. These choices, though costly in the short run, form the foundation for innovation, structural change, and long-term economic growth (Dobb, 1960).

For Dobb (1960), economic development was synonymous with industrialization—a process of structural transformation that moves labour from agriculture to industry to raise overall productivity and employment. Maurice Dobb’s model is particularly relevant for underdeveloped and post-colonial economies, which face structural constraints such as low capital stock, technological dependence, and historical legacies of unequal exchange. His framework offers guidance for overcoming these impediments by linking technological choice to broader questions of industrial structure and social transformation.

During the early industrialization of Britain, France, and Germany, displaced artisans were, to a significant degree, absorbed by rapidly expanding industries. These governments facilitated this transition through the provision of elementary education and the retraining of the workforce, thereby creating new employment opportunities. In the colonies, by contrast, artisans displaced by rising manufactured imports received no such support in skills development or retraining. Furthermore, the few modern industries established in India reserved skilled positions for British personnel, systematically excluding native workers (Siddiqui, 2015). Critically, this period of industrial disruption did not coincide with a significant expansion of primary education for the general population. The limited educational institutions that were opened catered primarily to a small elite from the upper castes, thereby creating a new form of structural dependency on Britain rather than fostering broad-based development (Siddiqui, 1996).

The pivotal role of innovation in economic dynamics was first highlighted by Joseph Schumpeter. His theory of “creative destruction” posits that economic growth is a disruptive, cyclical process driven by entrepreneurs who introduce radical innovations—new products, processes, or markets. These innovations grant temporary monopoly profits but ultimately render existing industries obsolete, creating a wave of economic transformation. For Schumpeter, this entrepreneurial competition through innovation, not price competition, is the core engine of capitalism. Consequently, public investment in education and infrastructure is vital to enable this entrepreneurial function and to facilitate the diffusion of new technologies (Sweezy, 1943).

In contrast to Schumpeter’s focus on entrepreneurial dynamism, neoclassical exogenous growth models, such as the Solow model, treat technological progress as an external (exogenous) force—a “manna from heaven” that independently drives long-run growth. In these models, growth is ultimately determined by external factors like the savings rate and population growth, with technological advancement remaining unexplained within the economic framework (Sweezy, 1943).

This explanatory gap was addressed by endogenous growth theory, pioneered by Paul Romer. Romer’s model (1986) endogenizes technological progress, arguing it arises from intentional, profit-maximizing investments within the economic system—specifically in human capital formation and research and development (R&D). Later contributions, such as those by Barro (1990), emphasized the complementary role of public expenditure in fostering these growth-generating activities. The key divergence from Schumpeter lies in the mechanism: while Schumpeter focused on the disruptive act of the entrepreneur, endogenous theory systematizes the investment in knowledge and innovation as a continuous, scalable process. Crucially, both Schumpeterian and endogenous perspectives affirm the state’s crucial role in optimizing conditions for innovation through education, R&D policy, and public investment.

The implication of this theoretical evolution is profound for development strategy. Endogenous models demonstrate that technological progress is not a random external gift but a product of internal policy choices. Therefore, for countries in the Global South, achieving prosperity and higher incomes in a globally competitive environment necessitates the deliberate cultivation of an ecosystem capable of developing and adopting appropriate technologies. This requires policies that go beyond merely importing technology and instead foster the domestic capacity for innovation and its diffusion, tailored to local conditions and development goals. The experiences of China, Vietnam, and Malaysia since the 1980s provide empirical illustrations of how late-industrializing economies can strategically manage technological upgrading, industrial diversification, and human-capital formation within varying institutional settings (Siddiqui, 2025b).

Neoclassical growth theory seeks to explain the determinants of long-term economic expansion. Within this tradition, a fundamental distinction exists between exogenous and endogenous models. Exogenous growth theory posits that sustained growth is driven primarily by factors external to the economic system, such as an unexplained rate of technological progress or an exogenous savings rate. The Solow model exemplifies this approach, where, given fixed labour and static technology, an economy converges to a steady-state equilibrium. Further growth beyond this point requires external “shocks,” typically technological advances treated as manna from heaven.

In contrast, endogenous growth theory, developed by economists like Paul Romer, internalizes the engine of growth. It argues that long-term expansion is a byproduct of activities within the economic system itself, such as deliberate investments in human capital, research and development (R&D), and policy-driven innovation. Here, technological progress is not an external gift but the result of intentional, profit-motivated investment. While both exogenous and endogenous neoclassical models stress the critical role of technology in achieving sustained growth, they fundamentally disagree on its source: external and unexplained versus internal and systematically generated.

A broad consensus in development economics holds that innovation is a key driver of productivity increases, structural change, and economic modernization, which in turn are fundamental to sustained GDP growth. The theoretical exploration of how innovation fuels growth has evolved significantly, most notably through the distinction between exogenous and endogenous growth models.

IV. Empirical Evidence

The OECD (2010) study argues that innovation is a key driver of economic growth and job creation across all levels of development. Both highly industrialized and least developed economies can benefit from well-designed policy interventions that promote innovation. Consequently, a stronger understanding of innovation and innovation policy should occupy a more prominent place on the global development agenda, a need to which this volume seeks to contribute. The OECD (2010) further emphasizes that innovation driven by research and development (R&D) must be broadened to include other forms of knowledge and learning (Kraemer-Mbula and Wamae, 2010).

With respect to improving knowledge on innovation in developing countries, the OECD study highlights a persistent gap: despite the well-established link between innovation and economic performance, Africa continues to lag behind other regions. The continent has experienced a marked decline in economic growth since the early 2000s, falling from a peak of 6.6% in 2002 to –2% in 2020 (World Bank 2022). The disparity is even more pronounced in indicators of research and innovation. Africa contributes only 2% of global research output, accounts for merely 1.3% of global R&D expenditure, and generates just 0.1% of worldwide patents (Kraemer-Mbula and Wamae, 2010).

Against this backdrop, the present study investigates empirically the impact of innovation on economic growth in African countries. More broadly, it seeks to examine whether research and innovation constitute the missing links in the continent’s economic development.

The role of innovation in driving economic growth has been well documented in developed economies. Pradhan et al. (2020), for instance, demonstrate that innovation positively contributes to growth in OECD countries. In contrast, relatively few empirical studies have examined the innovation–growth nexus in African economies, and the limited existing work typically focuses on a single region or a small group of countries. To address this gap, the present study investigates the relationship between innovation and economic growth in 32 African countries.

Pradhan et al study contributes to the literature in several ways. First, it employs a comprehensive innovation index for a wide set of African countries, offering insights that are particularly relevant for policymaking in the post-COVID-19 era. Unlike conventional indicators such as R&D expenditure or patent counts, the innovation index captures multiple dimensions of national innovation systems. Second, the study estimates a full endogenous growth model that incorporates human capital, allowing for a more complete assessment of the factors that drive the economic transformation Africa urgently requires. Third, it provides evidence on the variables that may help African countries overcome the post-pandemic growth slowdown and move closer to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030. The findings are expected to inform economic planners and policymakers across the continent (Kasongo and Makamu, 2024).

Pradhan et al. analysis (2020) examines the impact of innovation on economic growth in 32 African countries from 2006 to 2017 using a panel-corrected standard error (PCSE) estimation approach. The results are consistent with predictions of the endogenous growth model, indicating that innovation exerts a positive and statistically significant effect on economic growth in African economies. However, the study also highlights the need for improved reporting of innovation-related indicators—such as R&D survey data and patent registration records—to strengthen the evidence base for policy decision-making. Enhancing these systems is essential for enabling African countries to participate effectively in the Fourth Industrial Revolution and to close the gap with more advanced economies.

Although substantial work remains to strengthen innovation systems across the continent, several African countries have made notable progress in implementing innovation-oriented policy initiatives over the past decade. South Africa, Rwanda, Kenya, Nigeria, and Morocco, for example, have launched targeted strategies to stimulate innovation-led growth. Rwanda has established the National Commission for Science and Technology, expanded R&D centres, and introduced various incentive schemes for R&D and innovation. Kenya has invested in the development of institutions that support science, technology, and innovation, including an innovation policy framework that articulates the country’s long-term vision. A key element of this framework is the emphasis on generating and managing intellectual property rights—alongside technology transfer, development, and diffusion—to enhance national innovation capacity (Kasongo and Makamu, 2024).

The study by Pradhan et al. analysis (2020) further recommends, first, that African governments increase financial and material support for R&D in both public and private institutions. Such support should include dedicated funding mechanisms, initiatives that encourage entrepreneurial research mindsets among academics, and the creation of an enabling environment that allows business enterprises to conduct research and innovate effectively. Second, the study recommends that African countries strengthen their national innovation systems by fostering robust collaboration among researchers in academic institutions, experts in the business community, financial institutions, and policymakers. Such collaboration is essential for building resilient local innovation capabilities that can withstand economic turbulence (Siddiqui, 2025c).

Another study by the World Bank (2017) provides extensive analysis of innovation in developing countries and identifies what it terms an “innovation paradox”: despite the potentially high returns to innovation, firms often underinvest not because of lack of interest, but because of weak managerial capabilities, poor policy alignment, and financing constraints. The report highlights the importance of building basic managerial and organizational competencies, improving human capital, strengthening university–industry linkages, and adopting policy instruments—such as the “capabilities escalator”—that are tailored to a country’s stage of development. The emphasis is placed on technological adoption and improvements in firm practices rather than on R&D alone. The study also examines innovation financing, green innovation, and the effectiveness of innovation agencies, drawing on Enterprise Survey data that document substantial returns to innovation activities. Overall, developing countries tend to underinvest in innovation due to weak institutions, skill shortages, and ineffective policy frameworks. According to the World Bank, policy interventions should begin by reinforcing firm-level fundamentals—including management quality, workforce skills, internal incentives, and outward orientation—and by promoting technology diffusion alongside invention. Collaboration between firms and universities or research centres significantly enhances the likelihood of innovation (World Bank, 2017).

Analysing GDP growth in China and India from 1981 to 2004, Fan (2011) finds that innovation capacity played a substantial role in driving economic expansion in both countries, particularly after the 1990s. He measures innovation-related output through indicators such as high-tech exports, patent activity, and the expansion of services and manufacturing. The study highlights that the rising innovation capacity of China and India is largely attributable to significant public and private investment in R&D and human capital development (Siddiqui, 2025d). Both economies experienced accelerated growth beginning in the 1980s; by 2006, China and India had become the world’s fourth- and twelfth-largest economies, registering average GDP growth rates of 9.8% and 6% respectively over the 1981–2004 period (Siddiqui, 2019a; The Economist, 2007).

Fan’s (2011) study argues that “the considerable progress of China and India in innovation capacity can be reflected by rapidly growing patents and high tech/service exports. First, patent activities, measured by patents granted by the US patent office, have increased significantly for China and India …Innovation activities in domestic organisation seem to be more active in China than those in India as 44 of the top 50 patent winners in China are domestic firms, while about 30 out of the top 50 patent winners in India are foreign multinationals…Nevertheless, the situation seems to be changing; only 15% of patents during 1990-2001 went to foreign affiliates located in India… Second, China and India have successfully promoted their high-tech and service exports in recent decades (China outperforms in high-tech export while India excels in service export), thus enjoying mounting economic benefit derived from technological progress in global market. While high-tech exports accounted for 5% of China’s overall exports and less than 1% of GDP in 1992, they reached $163 billion, accounting for over 25% and 8.4% of total exports and GDP respectively in 2004.” (Fan, 2011:54)

Acemoglu et al. (2005) similarly emphasize the central role of institutions in shaping long-run economic performance. They argue that institutional quality influences how human capital is allocated, including the extent to which it is directed toward R&D activities that support sustained economic growth. Effective institutions are characterized by the enforcement of contracts, protection of property rights, predictable and efficient judicial systems, transparent public administration, low levels of corruption, pro-market regulatory frameworks, and the implementation of the rule of law. These institutional features collectively promote investment, innovation, and broader economic development.

V. A Radical Critique: The Marxist Perspective

The endogenous growth model incorporates a production function for aggregate output in which capital and labour serve as the primary inputs. This model modifies the traditional one-sector growth framework by allowing productivity improvements to be generated internally rather than treated as exogenous. In this context, productivity growth may arise from increasing returns to scale associated with R&D activities and investments in human capital. Thus, endogenous growth theory is fundamentally concerned with identifying the sources of productivity increase.

In addressing this issue, Fine (2000:249) argues that: “A crucial consequence of endogenous sources of productivity increase is that they involve market imperfections. This has provided the second central component of endogenous growth theory. With all agents optimising on the basis of given prices, an associated equilibrium is not Pareto-efficient. This is a simple result of the externalities or socially increasing returns to scale involved. Generally, it follows that the competitive outcome induces a level of saving that is below the optimum, since private agents take into account the knock-on effects of corresponding levels of investment.”

A key contribution of endogenous growth theory, therefore, lies in its explanation of how productivity changes occur and how market imperfections shape these dynamics. Schumpeter’s work provides an important foundation, highlighting monopoly rents as the main incentive for innovation. However, this approach often omits the role of broader social forces, economic structures, and production relations in shaping technological change.

In this respect, endogenous growth theory stands in contrast to the classical political economy tradition. Adam Smith emphasized the role of an expanding division of labour in enhancing productivity; David Ricardo developed a theory of differential rent embedded in changing economic structures; and Karl Marx identified the accumulation of capital as the driving force behind technological advancement and productivity increases. These classical approaches raise fundamental questions about how value is formed in an economy undergoing technological change—whether through the deepening division of labour or shifts in the composition of capital (Robinson, 1956).

With all agents optimising on the basis of given prices, an associated equilibrium is not Pareto-efficient.

Be Fine (2000:249) concludes: “Policy implications, especially as regards trade liberalisation, depend upon the mechanisms through which endogenous growth is generated and the market imperfections to which they are attached… [free trade] will allow for the greatest scope for spillover and other effects to accrue, although it is possible for either poor or rich countries to lose, depending upon the relative impact of scale economies, catch-up and first-mover advantages. Whilst trade and other policy measures can be considered together, as in levels of education expenditure, endogenous growth theory in the context of trade policy rarely considers the portfolio policies that might promote competitive advantage in particular sectors.”

Marxist critique fundamentally challenges the premises of both neoclassical frameworks. It contends that models such as those of Solow and Romer abstract from the underlying social relations and contradictions that structure capitalist economies. By treating individual agents, aggregate capital, and technology as neutral or depoliticized inputs, these models overlook core dynamics such as class struggle, the exploitation of labour through surplus value extraction, and capitalism’s inherent tendencies toward crisis and instability.

The critique calls for a renewed emphasis on substantive state intervention, social planning, and the reactivation of Marxist analytical tools. In a period marked by structural crises within the global capitalist system, an approach grounded in class analysis and attention to social conflict is presented as indispensable for formulating a coherent alternative to neoclassical interpretations of economic growth.

From Marxist perspective, mainstream growth theories offer a highly sanitized understanding of economic dynamics. They fail to explain why capital accumulates in the first place, how income distribution between wages and profits—central to shaping aggregate demand—is determined, or why growth is historically interrupted by phases of stagnation, crisis, and financial upheaval. Even endogenous growth models, despite acknowledging the importance of innovation, tend to conceptualize technology as a public good or as an extension of human capital. In doing so, they overlook the extent to which technological change is embedded in class conflict—for example, the adoption of labour-saving technologies as a strategy to discipline labour and expand surplus value (Siddiqui, 2023).

Despite their theoretical innovations, the “new” endogenous growth models do not constitute a complete departure from Solow’s formal framework. They remain situated within a neoclassical macrodynamic structure that retains the same foundational assumptions. As a result, both exogenous and endogenous neoclassical models struggle to account for long-period growth. Their reliance on problematic constructs—such as the representative agent—and their treatment of the state as a neutral or benevolent “planner” detached from class interests render them ill-equipped to explain the structural features and historical dynamics of capitalist development.

VI. Conclusion

Scholars have long noted that in the early stages of modernization, public expenditure on skills development, training, and R&D is crucial, as it fosters productivity gains, enhances profitability, and stimulates investment. In addition, China and India have benefited from a comparative advantage in labour costs (Siddiqui, 2024e), which—combined with economic reforms and increasing openness—has attracted substantial foreign investment and technology inflows. This trajectory parallels the experience of East Asian economies in the 1960s and 1970s, where rapid growth was propelled by low wages, foreign capital, and imported technologies, ultimately contributing to rising domestic incomes and overall economic transformation.

The relationship between innovation and economic growth remains a central concern in development economics. The endogenous growth theories have provided valuable insights into how capital accumulation, human capital formation, and technological progress contribute to long-run growth. Endogenous models, in particular, highlight the importance of knowledge creation, R&D, and learning-by-doing, offering a framework in which innovation becomes an internal driver of productivity rather than an external shock. Empirical evidence from African countries reinforces these insights, demonstrating that innovation—broadly conceived—plays a significant role in shaping growth trajectories, especially when supported by effective institutions, human capital, and coherent policy frameworks.

Yet the limitations of mainstream growth theory are equally apparent. By abstracting from the social relations that underpin capitalist economies, neoclassical and endogenous models tend to depoliticize technology and overlook the structural forces that influence investment, income distribution, and long-period dynamics. A Marxist critique highlights these omissions, emphasizing class conflict, surplus value extraction, and the contradictory tendencies of capital accumulation as fundamental drivers of technological change and economic instability (Siddiqui, 2023). This perspective draws attention to the ways innovation can be both a force for productivity and a tool for intensifying exploitation or deepening inequality (Siddiqui, 2019b).

Taken together, these approaches suggest that a comprehensive understanding of innovation and growth requires integrating insights from both theoretical and empirical works. Innovation remains indispensable for expanding productive capacity and supporting development, but its effects cannot be divorced from the institutional and social contexts in which it unfolds. Strengthening national innovation systems, building human capabilities, and fostering collaboration among firms, universities, and the state are vital steps. At the same time, acknowledging the political economy of technological change—particularly questions of power, distribution, and structural constraint—is essential for constructing policies that promote inclusive and sustainable growth. In this sense, a more pluralistic approach to growth theory offers a promising path forward, one that recognizes both the transformative potential of innovation and the social forces that shape its outcomes.

About the Author

Dr. Kalim Siddiqui is an economist specializing in International Political Economy, Development Economics, Trade and Economic Policy. Since 1989, he has been teaching economics at various universities in Norway and the UK. Dr. Siddiqui’s research interests encompass a wide range of topics, including political economy, international trade, and economic history, South Asia, and emerging economies. He has presented papers at international conferences across numerous countries, reflecting his global engagement in the field. His scholarly pursuits span six broad domains: Political Economy, Development Economics, Economic History, Economic Policy, Globalization, and International Trade. Dr. Siddiqui has made significant contributions to research in areas such as trade policy, globalization, and political economy. His work has been published in chapters of edited books and articles published in peer-reviewed journals. For inquiries, Dr. Siddiqui can be reached at: [email protected]

References

  1. Dobb, Maurice (1960) An Essay on Economic Growth and Planning, London: Routledge.
  2. Fan, P. (2011) “Innovation Capacity and Economic Development: China and India” Economic Change and Restructuring 44(1): 49-73, April.
  3. Fine, B. (2000) “Endogenous Growth Theory: A Critical Assessment” Cambridge Journal of Economics, 24(2):245-65.
  4. Kasongo, A. and Makamu, T. (2024) “Innovation and economic growth: An empirical analysis for African countries” African Journal of Science, Technology, Innovation and Development, 16(6): 751-760.
  5. Kraemer-Mbula, E. and Wamae, W. (Edi.) (2010) Innovation and the Development Agenda, Paris: OECD.
  6. Mishra, P. (2013) “The sun is at last setting on Britain’s imperial myth” The Guardian, 7th May, London.
  7. Robinson, Joan (1956) The Accumulation of Capital, London: Macmillan.
  8. Siddiqui, K. (2025a) “Education under Neoliberalism: The Political Economy of Development in the Global South” World Financial Review, December.
  9. Siddiqui, K. (2025b) “Ideas, Policies, and Power: A Political Economy Perspective on Development in the Global South” World Financial Review, November.
  10. Siddiqui, K. (2025c) “International Financial Institutions as Instruments of Western Hegemony Debt, Austerity, and Exploitation in the Global South” World Financial Review, August.
  11. Siddiqui, K. (2025d) “Understanding the Rise of High Technology in China” World Financial Review,
  12. Siddiqui, K. (2024a) “Rising Foreign Debts of the Developing Countries and Deepening Economic Crisis” World Financial Review,
  13. Siddiqui, K. (2024b) “Revisiting the Japan’s Economic Stagnation” World Financial Review, February.
  14. Siddiqui, K. (2024c) “Economic Drain from India during the British Rule” World Financial Review, December.
  15. Siddiqui, K. (2024d) “The Multinational Corporations, Capitalism, and Imperialism: The Case Study of East India Company” World Financial Review, July.
  16. Siddiqui, K. (2024e) “China’s Growth Miracle and Development Strategy Since the 1980s” World Financial Review,
  17. Siddiqui, K. (2023) “Marxian Analysis of Capitalism and Crises” International Critical Thought 13(4):525-545.
  18. Siddiqui, K. (2020) “The Political Economy of Famines under Colonial India: A Critical Analysis” World Financial Review, July/August.
  19. Siddiqui, K. (2019a). “Economic Transformation of China and India: A Comparative Political Economy Perspective” Asian Profile 47(3):243 – 259.
  20. Siddiqui, K. (2019b) “The Political Economy of Inequality and the issue of ‘Catching up’” World Financial Review, July/August.
  21. Siddiqui, K. (2015). “Challenges for Industrialisation in India: State versus Market Policies” Research in World Economy 6(2): 85 – 98.
  22. Siddiqui, K. (1996) “Growth of Modern Industries under Colonial Regime: Industrial Development in British India between 1900 and 1946” Pakistan Journal of History and Culture 17(1):11 – 59, January.
  23. Sweezy, Paul (1943) “Professor Schumpeter’s Theory of Innovation” Review of Economics and Statistics 25(1):93-96, The MIT Press.
  24. World Bank (2017) The Innovation Paradox: Developing-Country Capabilities and the Unrealized Promise of Technological Catch-up, Washington DC: World Bank.

Japan Approves Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Restart Boosting Energy Security Goals

Niigata prefecture has cleared the final hurdle for the restart of Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, the world’s largest nuclear power plant, almost 15 years after the Fukushima disaster. The prefecture’s assembly passed a vote of confidence for Governor Hideyo Hanazumi, who endorsed the restart last month, effectively greenlighting operations. TEPCO is considering reactivating the first of seven reactors on January 20, which could increase electricity supply to Tokyo by an estimated 2%.

TEPCO, which operated the Fukushima plant, pledged 100 billion yen ($641 million) over 10 years to Niigata to secure local support. The company emphasized its commitment to safety, with spokesperson Masakatsu Takata stating, “We remain firmly committed to never repeating such an accident and ensuring Niigata residents never experience anything similar.”

Despite official assurances, public concern remains high. A survey in October found 60% of residents felt conditions for restart had not been met, and nearly 70% were uneasy about TEPCO running the plant. Around 300 protesters gathered outside the prefecture assembly, chanting slogans like ‘No Nukes’ and ‘Support Fukushima.’ Ayako Oga, a former Fukushima evacuee, described the restart as a reminder of past trauma, warning, “We know firsthand the risk of a nuclear accident and cannot dismiss it.”

Japan has restarted 14 of the 33 operable reactors since the 2011 disaster as it seeks to reduce reliance on imported fossil fuels, which make up 60% to 70% of electricity generation. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has backed nuclear restarts to strengthen energy security and counter high fuel costs, with Japan spending $68 billion last year on imported LNG and coal.

The government aims to double nuclear’s share of the electricity mix to 20% by 2040, partly to meet rising demand from AI data centres while advancing decarbonisation. Analysts say public acceptance of Kashiwazaki-Kariwa’s restart marks “a critical milestone” toward these goals, although opponents caution that safety risks remain a pressing concern.

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Why Specialized Graduate Paths Are Becoming Essential in a Shifting Economy

Specialized Online Education Technology

The professional landscape has undergone significant transformation. Globalization, rapid technological advancements, and evolving market demands have redefined what employers seek from their workforce. Broad, generalized degrees once guaranteed entry into stable careers.

However, today’s economy has been shown to reward expertise, adaptability, and niche competencies. This shift has made specialized graduate paths not only valuable but essential for individuals seeking to thrive in their chosen fields.

Here are a few points as to why specialized graduate paths are becoming essential in the world’s shifting economies.

The Impact of Technological Acceleration

One of the primary drivers behind the rise of specialized graduate programs is the speed of technological change. Industries such as artificial intelligence, renewable energy, biotech, and cybersecurity are advancing at rates that outpace traditional curriculum updates.

Intermediate-level knowledge is quickly becoming outdated, and companies require professionals who can grasp and apply the latest tools, methodologies, and regulatory standards. Thus, specialized graduate degrees— whether in data science, sustainable business practices, or human-computer interaction— provide immersive, focused training that equips students to engage with evolving technology from day one.

Globalization and Niche Market Demand

The interconnected nature of the global economy means that businesses often operate within complex international frameworks. This creates demand for graduates who understand highly specific areas such as cross-border trade law, supply chain optimization in emerging markets, or culturally nuanced marketing strategies.

Specialized graduate paths allow students to delve into these niche domains more deeply than generalized programs ever could. They integrate real-world case studies, industry partnerships, and targeted internships that prepare graduates to step directly into high-value roles. In competitive settings, such expertise can be the difference between being employable and being indispensable.

The Shrinking Shelf-Life of Skills

In the past, a single degree or certification could serve a professional for decades. Today, the lifecycle of many skills has shrunk to mere years due to constant innovation. Employers now expect candidates to continually update their competencies and demonstrate mastery of current approaches.

As such, specialized graduate programs are ideal for this reality because they emphasize cutting-edge curricula and often incorporate research components tied to emerging industry trends.

For example, a student in a financial technology (FinTech) master’s program won’t just learn about existing platforms, they’ll explore topics like blockchain’s evolving regulatory landscape and predictive analytics in investment strategy. This ensures graduates— like technicians, scientists, or social workers— exit their programs with skills that are fresh and relevant.

Bridging Academia and Industry

Another advantage of specialized graduate paths lies in their close alignment with industry needs. Many institutions design these programs collaboratively with corporate partners, ensuring coursework mirrors real-world challenges. This creates graduates who are industry-ready and able to contribute meaningfully without extensive on-the-job training.

Such programs often integrate capstone projects, cooperative placements, or simulation-based problem-solving, which further prepare students to navigate practical hurdles. In sectors facing talent shortages specialized graduates become critical assets in closing skill gaps.

Career Agility Through Specialization

At first glance, specialization might seem limiting, but in today’s economy it often enhances career agility. Professionals with deep expertise in a particular field can transition into new roles more easily because they bring transferable analytical frameworks and problem-solving skills— like those needed to pass the LSAT exam.

A graduate specializing in climate change policy, for instance, could work in governmental agencies, NGOs, private sector compliance, or international advisory roles. It is specialization that provides the intellectual depth needed for complex problem-solving while allowing graduates to adapt to related industries as opportunities arise.

The Employer Perspective

Companies operating in complex environments often face costly mistakes if decisions are made without a nuanced understanding of the field. Bringing in a candidate with focused training means less time spent on trial-and-error learning. Furthermore, specialized graduates often act as in-house experts, mentoring other staff and serving as a bridge between technical teams and management. This leadership potential is an added incentive for employers to seek out candidates with targeted advanced degrees.

Conclusion: The Future Belongs to Specialists

As industries evolve, the demand for professionals who combine deep technical mastery with adaptive thinking will only grow. Specialized graduate paths are designed to meet this demand head-on. For today’s ambitious learners, choosing a specialized graduate route is less about narrowing options and more about positioning themselves for leadership in high-demand, rapidly changing sectors.

How Cyber Threats Are Redefining Risk Management Across Industries

Cyber - System warning

It’s not uncommon to hear about widespread data breaches and cyberattacks affecting the public and the businesses they support. Sadly, cyber criminals know that by attacking businesses, they can acquire customer data. These innocent victims often lack the resources of the businesses they support, and the losses they suffer can be devastating.

Many of these attacks occur due to structural oversights and weaknesses. Cyber threats have redefined risk management, as business leaders must now consider previously rare problems that have become devastating.

Follow along as we explore how adopting strong cybersecurity practices is essential for businesses across all industries.

Cybersecurity is an Essential Part of Risk Management

Today, businesses across all industries rely on technology and digital frameworks for most aspects of operation. This naturally carries many risks, most of which are largely avoidable with careful planning and compliance. As digital infrastructures have expanded, cybercriminals have gotten more creative and emboldened.

Cyberattacks have increased by nearly 50% in the past year and show no signs of slowing down. Cybercriminals use artificial intelligence and elaborate scams to steal and expose sensitive information daily. Business owners and corporate leaders can avoid devastating cyber threats by adopting several key practices, including:

Enlist Help From Cybersecurity Professionals

As cyber threats become more prominent, businesses can’t strictly rely on their current risk management staff. Instead, existing risk management personnel must collaborate with cybersecurity professionals to combat cyber threats. Cybersecurity and data science are essential across all modern industries, so business owners must embrace them.

Bigger companies and corporations can afford to employ in-house cybersecurity teams. Doing so is the best way to protect the staff and company assets from cyber threats. However, smaller companies can’t always easily justify staff expansion.

In that case, they should at least hire a third-party cybersecurity firm to build a cybersecurity framework. That way, you can learn insights from professionals and acquire a strong security foundation.

Embrace a New Type of Training

Employee training looks different depending on the industry in question. However, the past several years show that businesses across all industries must embrace cybersecurity training. Whether you’re a nurse or a factory worker, you can expose yourself and your company to cyber threats even by opening the wrong email.

However, you can’t blame anyone for falling for such scams without proper training. Cyber threats don’t solely affect company computers, even if it may seem that way. For example, someone could send malware to an employee’s private email, and then the recipient could unknowingly expose company information by opening it.

This can be catastrophic when handling work phones and computers. Business owners must embrace cybersecurity training for all employees to protect them and their assets. Doing so can mitigate many modern risks and prevent major setbacks.

Protect the Supply Chain

Sadly, cybercriminals become smarter and more creative each year. Today, many cybercriminals attack businesses directly at the supply chain, which can yield devastating results. Suppliers often serve multiple businesses, so attacks against them can create a devastating domino effect.

Cybercriminals can disrupt the supply chain, resulting in significant financial losses for many businesses. Cybercrime investigation is currently one of the most promising law enforcement careers because of such attacks. Supply chains often consist of interconnected systems, which often include sensitive customer information.

Once a supplier is attacked, they will suffer big data breaches, which ultimately reveal sensitive information about their customers. Their customers should be able to trust that they take cybersecurity seriously and will protect their assets. Suppliers can avoid such attacks by implementing Zero Trust Architecture and building robust cybersecurity frameworks.

Ensure Compliance

The rise of cybercrime has led to the creation of cybersecurity polices. Such policies are essential, as corporate cyberattacks often leave the public at risk. For example, healthcare data breaches can violate HIPAA laws and negatively impact healthcare professionals and patients.

Corporate leaders and business owners understand the risk of neglecting cybersecurity. Today, they’re held accountable for such oversights and can face consequences for noncompliance. These regulations mandate that organizations must create incident response plans to address data breaches and attacks.

They must also disclose cyberattacks and leaks within a designated period. In doing so, the affected parties will know that their data was mishandled and exposed. Noncompliance can yield fines and operational disruptions that can be hard to come back from.

Risk-Averse Leaders Can Thrive in the Digital World

No matter how terrible cybercrime is, business leaders must hold a certain respect for it. Otherwise, it’s hard to understand just how vulnerable you, your employees, and your customers are to cyberattacks. Cybercriminals depend on business leaders underestimating their reach and creativity.

Cybercrime has become one of the biggest risks for businesses, corporations, and individuals. Investing in security frameworks and training employees on the importance of cybersecurity is more important than ever. If the risks aren’t enough to sway business leaders, they should at least fear the repercussions of noncompliance.

Siranogroup Reviews: Why Do Traders Choose This Broker?

Siranogroup Reviews: Why Do Traders Choose This Broker?

The modern trader is no longer someone who acts blindly. Today, traders need not promises of vague profits, but clear trading conditions, expert analytics, and software that performs reliably at critical moments. Siranogroup, a broker founded in France back in 1992, possesses all of these qualities. It offers direct access to global financial markets, a well-designed infrastructure, and—most importantly—professional proprietary software around which the entire trading ecosystem is built.

Over more than 30 years of operation, the broker has built a solid client base both in Europe and beyond. Numerous positive Siranogroup reviews online confirm a simple truth: being honest with clients and continuously evolving is the key to long-term success.

Siranogroup Reviews: What Real Users Say

Despite strong competition, user feedback about the French broker shows a level of consistency rarely seen in the industry. Most reviewers find little to criticize in Siranogroup’s services.

François, 34:
“I started with the minimum deposit of 250 euros and doubted myself for a long time. But after a month of trading, I realized the service really works. The signals impressed me the most—they help you not to fear the market. And the 100% bonus accelerated my account growth.”

Manon, 41: “The most valuable thing is honesty. Withdrawals are guaranteed, everything is clear and without any strange issues. Support doesn’t give scripted answers—they genuinely help.”

Andrew, 29: “I like that everything with this broker is well thought out. Support responds quickly, the terminal works without freezing, and the in-house analysts truly help find entry points. I didn’t expect the service to be so convenient—you feel that you’re not forgotten and that functionality is constantly improving. Now I trade more calmly and confidently.”

A wide selection of Siranogroup reviews can easily be found on independent platforms such as con-telegraph.ie, Medium, and Blogspot.

Investment Solutions for Different Goals

Siranogroup structures its services so that traders can grow within a single ecosystem without changing platforms as their experience or capital increases. To achieve this, several account types are offered:

The Starter account begins at 250 euros and is suitable for beginners, allowing them to familiarize themselves with the platform and test strategies with minimal risk.

Level 1 accounts start from 2,500 euros and provide access to advanced analytics, twice-weekly personal consultations, and more favorable spreads and commissions.

Level 2 accounts start from 10,000 euros and include trade assistance, insurance for selected operations, and priority processing of withdrawal requests.

This structure allows clients to progress gradually by upgrading their status rather than changing tools.

Profitable Trading Ideas

Siranogroup’s analytical department provides users with proprietary trading signals on a daily basis. These signals cover various asset classes, with the highest concentration in Forex and cryptocurrency markets. Public sources indicate that the accuracy of these recommendations exceeds 85%.

Each signal includes the ticker of the asset, the recommended trade direction, entry level and profit target, stop-loss level, and a brief explanation to provide context.

Signals are delivered directly to the terminal, by email, or via messenger, which is especially convenient for busy traders who cannot stay in front of a screen all day.

The Trader’s Main Tool: Siranogroup Software

While many brokers focus on marketing, Siranogroup focuses on technology.

The company’s proprietary trading terminal is a full-fledged working environment designed for efficiency rather than promotion. It is available in a browser-based version, desktop application, and mobile app, all of which are fully synchronized.

Key features of the software include integration with global liquidity providers, ensuring order execution at the best available prices without requotes or slippage; instant execution with minimal latency even during high market volatility; a flexible charting environment that allows users to customize layouts, timeframes, save templates, and apply advanced analysis tools; a wide range of built-in technical indicators from basic moving averages to complex composite tools; real-time notification modules for important events, price levels, and trend changes; and an automatically updated news feed that keeps traders informed about economic and geopolitical developments.

The main advantage of the software is its balance between simplicity and functionality—it is intuitive for beginners and highly effective for experienced traders.

Security and Capital Protection

Siranogroup Reviews: Why Do Traders Choose This Broker?

The broker operates in accordance with EU standards and complies with strict European regulatory requirements.

All client funds are stored in segregated accounts, preventing their use in the company’s operational activities.

Data protection measures include SSL encryption, two-factor authentication, monitoring of suspicious IP addresses, and additional anti-fraud systems.

Siranogroup does not evade its financial obligations—traders receive their funds on time.

Education and Support

Siranogroup actively develops its educational resources, which include group training sessions, webinars, self-study video lessons, a library of e-books, analytical reports, and regular masterclasses.

A distinctive service offered by the French broker is personal mentorship. Attentive mentors help beginners develop individual strategies, avoid common mistakes, and continuously improve their skills.

Conclusion: Is Siranogroup Worth Trusting?

Siranogroup is a broker with a long history that has built its business model around client interests. It does not use a dealing-desk scheme—its income depends solely on trading volumes on the platform, which makes interaction with investors transparent and fair.

Clear rules, modern software, personalized services, high-accuracy signals, and quality support create the environment sought by traders who are tired of risky and unpredictable investment platforms.

Siranogroup helps traders focus on what matters most—effective investment management. If you are looking for stability, clear tools, and reliable software, this brokerage company truly deserves attention.

Japan Inflation Holds Above Target Boosting Prospects For Bank Rate Hike

Japan’s consumer inflation eased slightly in November but remained above the central bank’s target, reinforcing expectations of an interest rate increase. The country’s inflation rate fell to 2.9%, marking the 44th consecutive month above the 2% threshold set by the Bank of Japan, signaling persistent price pressures despite slower growth in some key sectors.

Core inflation, which excludes fresh food prices, held steady at 3% from October, aligning with economists’ forecasts compiled by Reuters. Meanwhile, the “core-core” inflation rate, which strips out both food and energy, edged lower to 3% from 3.1%, suggesting underlying price pressures are gradually stabilizing. Rice prices, which surged dramatically earlier this year, increased 37.1% in November, marking the sixth consecutive month of deceleration.

“Core-core inflation will slow and stabilize at 2% by mid-2026 as supply-driven food inflation gradually fades,” said Shigeto Nagai, head of Japan economics at Oxford Economics. However, he cautioned that additional supply shocks or yen depreciation could trigger prolonged cost-push inflation, representing a “major risk” for policymakers.

The data comes as the Bank of Japan concludes its two-day policy meeting, with markets expecting a rate hike that would push interest rates to their highest levels since 1995. Analysts say the BOJ faces a delicate balancing act: raising rates may help rein in inflation but risks further slowing an already fragile economy. Revised GDP figures showed Japan contracted 0.6% quarter-on-quarter and 2.3% annualized in the third quarter, a deeper decline than previously reported.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi emphasized to a business lobby that proactive government spending is necessary to stimulate growth and tax revenue, warning against excessive fiscal tightening. Takaichi has historically supported a looser monetary policy and voiced concerns over aggressive BOJ rate hikes.

Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Masazumi Wakatabe echoed the need for fiscal support, suggesting that raising Japan’s neutral interest rate through enhanced economic potential could justify higher policy rates. The neutral rate is defined as the level that balances growth and inflation. “If Japan’s neutral rate rises as a result, it would be natural for the BOJ to raise interest rates,” Wakatabe said, while stressing caution to avoid premature tightening.

Governor Kazuo Ueda has repeatedly highlighted the difficulty in estimating the terminal policy rate, placing it broadly between 1% and 2.5%. Meanwhile, market reactions to the inflation report were modest: the yen strengthened slightly to trade at 155.53 against the dollar, the Nikkei 225 gained 0.69%, and 10-year Japanese government bond yields edged down to 1.957%.

The November data suggests that inflation pressures remain persistent, with policymakers likely to use rate adjustments alongside fiscal measures to steer the economy toward stable growth. Analysts say the BOJ must carefully navigate between containing inflation and supporting an economy still recovering from structural headwinds, demographic challenges, and subdued domestic demand.

As Japan approaches its year-end policy review, investors will closely watch central bank signals on interest rates, the yen, and bond yields, as any moves could have ripple effects across global financial markets.

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Why Off Plan Property is Driving Dubai’s Next Growth Cycle – Luxbridge Realty

Properties in Dubai

Dubai’s real estate market has entered a phase where growth is being shaped less by resale momentum and more by forward looking capital. At the center of this shift is the off plan sector, which has evolved from a speculative entry point into a structured engine of long term expansion. Investors who understand how Dubai builds, finances, and absorbs new developments are increasingly viewing off plan property as the clearest expression of where the market is heading next.

Off plan transactions now account for a significant portion of Dubai’s annual property volume. In recent years, off plan sales have represented well over half of all residential transactions by value, driven by sustained population growth, strong foreign demand, and a development pipeline designed to meet long term housing needs. The scale is substantial. Dubai has hundreds of active and upcoming projects across master planned communities, waterfront districts, and mixed use urban zones, reflecting confidence not only from developers but from the capital supporting them.

Major names continue to expand their pipelines. Developers such as Emaar, Nakheel, Dubai Properties and Binghatti are launching new communities and vertical developments aligned with infrastructure growth and demographic demand. These projects are not isolated towers. They are integrated ecosystems with retail, transport access, and lifestyle amenities designed to support long term occupancy. This depth is one reason analysts view the Dubai off plan property market as structurally different from pre construction markets elsewhere.

Investors are drawn to off plan property for several reasons. Entry pricing is typically lower than completed stock, offering a built in margin between launch and handover. Payment plans allow capital to be deployed gradually rather than upfront, improving cash flow efficiency. Off plan purchases also provide exposure to future supply in areas that may not yet be fully developed, allowing investors to benefit from infrastructure and community maturity over time.

Understanding payment structures is essential. Most off plan developments in Dubai require an initial commitment of around ten to twenty percent to secure a unit, followed by staged payments linked to construction milestones. These plans often extend across three to five years, with a balance payable on completion. Some developments offer post handover plans, allowing investors to continue payments after receiving the property. This structure lowers entry barriers while aligning developer and buyer interests through regulated escrow frameworks.

Due diligence remains critical. Investors need to assess developer track record, escrow compliance, construction timelines, location fundamentals, and exit liquidity. Off plan success is rarely about discounts alone. It is about selecting projects that align with long term demand drivers such as employment hubs, transport connectivity, and lifestyle infrastructure. The most experienced investors treat off plan purchases as strategic allocations rather than short term trades.

Sourcing the right opportunities has become more competitive as global interest increases. Early access, accurate pricing intelligence, and realistic assessments of delivery risk now separate informed investors from reactive ones. This is where Luxbridge Realty has positioned itself as a market guide rather than a volume driven intermediary. The firm evaluates off plan projects through a framework that prioritises fundamentals, developer credibility, and long term value creation over launch day hype.

Luxbridge advisors focus on matching investors with developments that fit their broader objectives, whether that is capital appreciation, future rental income, or portfolio diversification. Through platforms such as Luxbridge Realty, investors can research off plan opportunities with context, comparing projects based on location strategy, payment flexibility, and projected market absorption rather than marketing language.

Dubai’s regulatory environment has played a decisive role in supporting off plan growth. Escrow laws protect buyer funds, transaction processes are transparent, and delivery standards are closely monitored. These safeguards have helped convert off plan investing from a perceived risk into a widely accepted strategy for both regional and international capital.

As Dubai continues to expand its urban footprint, off plan property will remain a primary driver of market evolution. New districts, transport links, and mixed use developments are being planned years in advance, giving investors visibility into how the city intends to grow. For those who understand the structure of the off plan market and work with advisors who prioritise insight over urgency, this segment offers a disciplined path into Dubai’s next growth cycle.

Off plan investing is no longer about speculation. It is about alignment with a city building for the future. In that context, informed access, thoughtful selection, and experienced guidance are what turn opportunity into outcome.

Starbucks Burger King Turn to China Private Equity to Defend Growth

Global food and beverage groups are rewriting their China playbooks as competition intensifies and growth slows, turning to local private equity partners to protect market share and accelerate decision making.

Starbucks and Burger King are the latest multinational brands to sell majority stakes in their China operations, signaling a broader shift away from centralized control toward partnerships built for speed, localization, and operational agility. The model reflects how foreign brands are adapting to a market where domestic rivals move faster, price sharper, and understand local consumers more deeply.

Chinese private equity firms have emerged as favored partners because they can rapidly reshape menus, reset pricing, and expand aggressively into lower tier cities. “Their involvement enables the business to operate at ‘China speed,’” said Kei Hasegawa, partner at consulting firm YCP.

Starbucks has agreed to sell a 60% stake in its China unit to Boyu Capital in a $4 billion transaction that values the business at up to $13 billion over the long term, including licensing income. Burger King’s China operations will see CPE Capital invest $350 million for an 83% holding. Both deals are awaiting regulatory approval and are expected to close next year.

The approach is gaining momentum across the sector. This month, Beijing based IDG Capital acquired a controlling stake in French yogurt maker Yoplait’s China business in a deal valuing the unit at about $250 million. General Mills is reportedly weighing a sale of its Haagen Dazs stores in China, while Swedish oat milk producer Oatly Group AB has also explored divesting its China arm.

The backdrop is a dramatic shift in competitive dynamics. Western brands once thrived with limited localization, benefiting from premium positioning and novelty. That advantage has eroded as domestic players sharpen digital engagement, refine pricing strategies, and tailor products closely to local tastes. Luckin Coffee surpassed Starbucks in both revenue and store count in 2023. Restaurant Brands International has struggled with Burger King in China, where average sales per outlet trail its other major markets.

Local private equity firms offer more than capital. Their willingness to overhaul management, coupled with strong ties to suppliers, landlords, and regulators, has made them increasingly attractive partners. Beyond funding, they bring operational turnaround expertise and access to experienced leadership teams, said Hao Zhou, partner and head of Bain and Company’s Greater China private equity practice.

“Even before the deal is closed, they will go into the company, all ready to start focusing on a few key initiatives,” Zhou added.

Joint ventures are not new in China, but the current wave reflects a sense of urgency. Speed to market, deeper localization, and continuous innovation have become essential for survival in a crowded food and beverage landscape. Multinationals face a difficult choice between committing more capital to defend share or ceding control to a local partner, said Joe Ngai, chairman of McKinsey in Greater China.

Examples of deep localization are already visible. About 90% of the ice cream sold by Dairy Queen in China is designed exclusively for the local market, according to Frank Tang, chairman of FountainVest Partners, which operates Dairy Queen and Papa John’s Pizza in the country.

Royalty structures are emerging as a critical lever in these partnerships. Analysts say more global companies are likely to retain minority stakes while keeping intellectual property licensing rights, leaving daily operations to private equity owners. For Starbucks, royalty payments from Boyu could become the most valuable component of its projected China valuation.

People familiar with the bidding process said proposed royalty fees payable to Starbucks exceeded what several competing bidders were willing to accept. Starbucks declined to comment, and Boyu did not respond to requests for comment. Industry experts note that even small changes in royalty rates can materially affect profitability, especially in a high margin category like coffee.

Higher royalties often offset lower upfront valuations and point to growth strategies centered on store expansion. In some cases, lowering or deferring royalties early can improve cash flow and support faster rollout, Hasegawa said. Starbucks, however, has leverage to command premium terms due to brand strength and its ability to secure prime retail locations.

Boyu’s recent investment in SKP, which operates luxury malls in Beijing, could help Starbucks negotiate more favorable leases for its typically large format stores.

For private equity firms, China subsidiaries of multinational brands are increasingly attractive targets. After years of muted dealmaking, funds are under pressure to deploy capital, and established consumer businesses offer stable cash flows and brand recognition. The Starbucks process alone attracted interest from more than 20 potential buyers, mostly private equity firms.

“These businesses come as very attractive” assets with clear upside potential, Bain’s Zhou said. Returns can be realized through resale to another buyer or via public listings if growth rebounds.

McDonald’s remains a benchmark case. In 2023, McDonald’s China bought back its stake from Carlyle after six years, delivering a 6.7 times return for the private equity firm.

Deal data underscores the momentum. Private equity backed carve out transactions in China reached $39 billion this year as of Dec. 9, up from $23 billion in all of 2024, according to ARC Group. Several large transactions, including a $6.9 billion PAG led purchase of 48 Wanda shopping malls, fueled the rebound.

The Starbucks transaction highlights a wider trend of foreign companies shedding non core or underperforming China units amid geopolitical uncertainty, weak consumer demand, and fierce competition. “Some Western firms face shareholder pressure to exit the slow-growth China segments,” said Jess Zhou, head of M and A China at ARC Group.

For private equity investors, that pressure is creating opportunity. For multinational brands, the deals reflect a recognition that winning in China increasingly requires local control, local capital, and a willingness to let go.

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The Rise of the Unified API in Banking: The End of Country-By-Country Integration

Laptop with API banking on screen
Photo by Lukas on Pexels

Software has brought markets from around the world closer than ever. A software firm in Tallinn can easily sell to a customer in Brisbane without much friction. Until more recently, it has been the financial process of payment that has offered the most amount of friction, which is surprising to hear for many local businesses.

Money does not move like data. It’s far more regulated and involves a fragmented domestic clearing systems, along with local frameworks and distinct banking protocols. It’s messy, timely and expensive.

For decades, the only solution was often to simply establish a local legal entity so you could open a local bank account and integrate the payment system. It as a country-by-country approach and costs a lot in HR, understanding compliance, and often having unnecssary physical presences around the world. Today, with a unified API, money is beginning to behave a little bit more like data.

The fragmentation problem 

In Latin America alone, the landscape is dizzying, with  Mexico using SPEI (real-time payments), Brazil has turned to PIX, Colombia has its own banking protocols, while the United States relies on the ACH and Fedwire networks.

Scaling a startup across these markets would have been a nightmare a decade ago. The API specifications for a bank in São Paulo are entirely different from those in Mexico City. The authentication standards, along with the data formats and error codes, share very little in common. The payment infrastructure needed to serve these markets was a huge barrier to entry for smaller startups in their early stages.

One connection, multiple markets

The promise of the unified banking API is simply the decoupling of business logic from banking logic. In other words, by sitting between the enterprise itself and the financial institutions, these providers translate the chaos of local banking into a single,  standardized, and very developer-friendly language. Now, the business operations needn’t factor payments as much into their operational decisions.

It’s comparable to how Twilio changed telecommunications. As developers no longer need to negotiate with local carriers to send an SMS in a different country, fintechs no longer need to build direct connections to local banks so that they can move money. Integrate once with a unified API for cross border banking, and that’s that – the provider handles the routing, translation, execution, and everything else to do with the transaction, whether it’s PIX in Brazil or a sluggish US wire transfer.

This “write once, run everywhere” assumption now reduces the engineering overhead required for expansion. Going into new markets is less of a problem – not just in terms of upfront capital, but time. 

The new players in town

Prometeo is a prominent company that sits in a profitable niche by focusing on the “borderless” nature of the Americas – a space that is becoming more integrated generally. It brings together the disparate financial systems across the continent and the US into a single access point so that businesses can view balances and centralize treasury without needing dozens of local logins. 

Belvo is a competitor in the region and is mostly credited with building the Open Finance rails that allow for deep data access across Latin American financial institutions. Outside the Americas though, Yapily has mirrored this move in Europe to provide an infrastructure layer that connects to thousands of banks for open banking payments and data aggregation. Salt Edge is a very global option as the have access to well over 5,000 financial institutions.

Treasury and data

Payment initiation (so, sending from point A to point B) is often the headline feature with these sorts of platforms, but actually, the data component is just as revolutionary. For a regional CFO, they can now benefit from greater visibility. A traditional setup would have meant understanding the real-time cash position of a company with five different log-ins, various portals, exporting CSV files, and then manually consolidating said spreadsheets. This could be automated in some cases, but it’s quit the undertaking and is prone to breaking.

Unified APIs solve this though by aggregating account information so that a central treasury dashboard can easily query a single API to retrieve balances and transaction histories from accounts in Peru, Chile, Miami… Simultaneously. 

This can help prevent trapped liquidity where funds sit idle in one country while perhaps you’re paying interest on a credit line in another. Treasury management becomes more reactive and dynamic where you can optimize working capital in ways that were previously impossible.

The future is most certainly borderless

Unified API are finally bringing maturity to the fintech ecosystem at a time where crypto threatened to offer a solution. The first wave of fintech was all about consumer experience with slick apps and neobanks. The current wave is much more about infrastructure and fixing the B2B plumbing that connects entire economies. International business had already boomed with even the smallest of businesses – but now, even the very idea of a domestic business may begin to fade, particularly with the growth of multi-lateral blocs.

Should You Trust AI With Your Numbers?

AI as financial calculator

By Dr. Gleb Tsipursky

Picture a CFO scanning a cash-flow model where one interest rate cell sits off by a single percentage point. The spreadsheet still looks plausible, the commentary around it still sounds convincing, yet the valuation for a new initiative swings millions in the wrong direction. This is where the promise of AI assisted analysis collides with a harder truth: if the arithmetic is untrustworthy, the story becomes unsafe to act on. The team behind Omni Calculator built the ORCA Benchmark to test that risk in everyday math, and no leading model scored above 63 percent on real-world tasks.

Dependable calculation accuracy turns information into something a leader can safely act on.

Business leaders now run budgets, pricing plans, staffing scenarios, and investment cases through dashboards that quietly incorporate AI generated outputs. When those outputs contain even small arithmetic errors, pricing curves bend the wrong way, discounted cash flows lose credibility, and risk metrics understate exposure just when boards expect clarity. The ORCA results underscore one central point for executives: speed alone never creates insight. Dependable calculation accuracy turns information into something a leader can safely act on. In a world of shorter planning cycles and more data, treating AI numbers as provisional until they are verified counts as basic financial hygiene.

When AI Sounds Smart But Counts Wrong

The ORCA Benchmark highlights how far language systems still lag behind a good spreadsheet when stakes rest on precise arithmetic. Across 500 real-world questions, leading models answered only a little more than half of all test items correctly, and financial problems that involved compound interest, amortization, or discounted cash flows produced frequent errors even when the text explanation sounded correct. Independent math reasoning research on large language models shows the same pattern: the system selects the right formula in words while misapplying it when translating the steps into actual numbers.

That weakness stems from how these systems learn. They predict the next token in a sequence, they do not execute strict numeric rules. As a result, they lean on patterns found in text rather than guaranteed algorithms. Benchmarks focused on multi-step reasoning tasks show that once a problem includes several intermediate results, rounding decisions, or order-of-operations choices, error rates climb quickly. A model can write a coherent justification for a loan structure and still miscalculate the interest. For a decision maker, that polished language becomes a liability, because it hides flaws that a bare number or unfinished spreadsheet would have revealed.

Psychology adds another layer of risk. A recent human–AI trust study found that people tend to over-trust confident AI outputs even when they understand that models make mistakes. Separate research on AI persuasion in debate settings shows that language models often outperform humans at changing opinions. Put together, this means a system can argue for a flawed projection more persuasively than a junior analyst. Without explicit training, professionals risk assuming that a system that writes like an expert also counts like one. Business leaders who rely on that combination of fluent prose and fragile math without verification invite quiet, compounding errors into their decision process.

Where AI Math Errors Hit Business Hardest

Financial decisions sit at the center of this exposure because they rely on exact relationships between inputs, formulas, and time. Profit margin analysis, loan amortization schedules, cash-flow projections, and ROI models all depend on chains of percentages, compounding, and discount factors that punish even a small error. The ORCA finance tasks show that compound interest, loan repayment, and discounted cash flows still trigger a meaningful share of incorrect answers, despite clear verbal explanations. A single misapplied rate can turn a profitable project into an illusion or hide the true cost of leverage. Wise leaders let AI draft scenarios and narrative while they rely on deterministic tools for the actual numbers.

Operational planning faces the same fragility when executives lean on AI for staffing forecasts, procurement plans, or logistics timelines. Small miscalculations in utilization rates or lead times cascade into stockouts, idle capacity, or missed service levels once they propagate through a full-year plan. Even apparently simple questions, such as calculating the annual percentage yield for a savings program or an employee share plan, deserve validation with a tool like the APY calculator rather than asking a chat interface to improvise the math. Strategic decisions draw on identical chains of arithmetic, whether the question involves market entry timing, price ladders, or long-horizon investment bets. Any scenario that joins multiple dependent calculations magnifies the impact of one wrong step.

The risk jumps again when AI drives customer-facing numbers. In lending, payroll, tax, or e-commerce tools, customers assume that whatever installment amount, discount, or refund appears on screen reflects the company’s standards, not a probabilistic model. Zendesk’s CX trends report notes that a large majority of leaders see AI as a core driver of personalized experiences, which means customers now treat AI outputs as part of the brand. Research on AI assistant errors answering factual questions shows that many responses still contain material mistakes. When those mistakes appear in payment plans or benefits calculations, customers feel misled rather than mildly inconvenienced. Trust drops quietly, then loyalty and revenue follow.

Building Verification Into Every AI-Powered Decision

If AI plays a meaningful role in financial and operational workflows, leaders need governance that treats calculation accuracy as a first-class requirement. One practical starting point is dual validation, every material number produced through AI is cross-checked either by a human analyst or a deterministic calculation engine such as Omni’s financial calculators for interest, ROI, and net present value. High-impact decisions, from capital investments to price changes to regulatory reports, require tiered validation where stricter tolerances, independent recomputation, and approvals are mandatory. Benchmarks like ORCA’s finance section offer a reference point for where models struggle, so teams can target extra safeguards around multi-step reasoning.

Technical teams carry much of the responsibility for making these safeguards real. They decide when to route a user request to a calculation API, a Python sandbox, or a language model, and they design guardrails that prevent fragile numerical reasoning from driving final outputs. Monitoring pipelines that log prompts, intermediate values, and final numbers allow teams to track error rates by use case and catch regressions when models or prompts change. Recent analysis of AI hallucinations and trust decline warns that accuracy often deteriorates quietly as systems update, which makes continuous measurement as important as the initial benchmark. At the same time, engineers can educate colleagues: let the model interpret messy inputs and choose formulas, and let deterministic engines perform the math that moves money, risk, or compliance.

If AI plays a meaningful role in financial and operational workflows, leaders need governance that treats calculation accuracy as a first-class requirement.

The same design discipline benefits entrepreneurs building AI powered products with numeric outputs. The most resilient approach uses the model to understand the user’s problem, extract input values, and identify the right formula, then hands those inputs to a hardened calculation engine through well-defined tools or APIs. The ORCA findings show that rounding, order-of-operations mistakes, and multi-step chains create many of the failures, so product teams gain from explicit precision rules and consistent rounding logic in code. When a tool recalculates interest, yield, or payback through a trusted engine and lets the model focus on explanation and user experience, customers receive clarity and companies reduce liability at the same time.

For business leaders, the clearest takeaway from the benchmark is straightforward: never accept AI generated numbers at face value when money, risk, regulation, or customer trust sit on the line. Treat every projection, rate, and ratio from a language model as a prototype that earns its place in a decision only after independent verification. Leaders who pair AI’s strengths in explanation and scenario generation with disciplined validation will innovate quickly without wandering into preventable financial mistakes. In a workplace where AI now touches everything from pricing to payroll, the organizations that win will be the ones that insist on getting the numbers right before they act.

About the Author

Dr. Gleb TsipurskyDr. Gleb Tsipursky PhD, serves as the CEO of the hybrid work consultancy Disaster Avoidance Experts and authored the best-seller Returning to the Office and Leading Hybrid and Remote Teams. He was named “Office Whisperer” by The New York Times for helping leaders overcome frustrations with Generative AI. He serves as the CEO of the future-of-work consultancy Disaster Avoidance Experts. Dr. Gleb wrote seven best-selling books, and his two most recent ones are Returning to the Office and Leading Hybrid and Remote Teams and ChatGPT for Leaders and Content Creators: Unlocking the Potential of Generative AI. His cutting-edge thought leadership was featured in over 650 articles and 550 interviews in Harvard Business ReviewInc. MagazineUSA TodayCBS NewsFox NewsTimeBusiness InsiderFortuneThe New York Times, and elsewhere. His writing was translated into Chinese, Spanish, Russian, Polish, Korean, French, Vietnamese, German, and other languages. His expertise comes from over 20 years of consultingcoaching, and speaking and training for Fortune 500 companies from Aflac to Xerox. It also comes from over 15 years in academia as a behavioral scientist, with 8 years as a lecturer at UNC-Chapel Hill and 7 years as a professor at Ohio State. A proud Ukrainian American, Dr. Gleb lives in Columbus, Ohio.

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