
A Scandinavian U.S. Would Be a Problem for the Global Economy
01 Jun 2021 3 Comments
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, comparative institutional analysis, constitutional political economy, economic growth, economic history, economics of education, entrepreneurship, history of economic thought, human capital, income redistribution, industrial organisation, labour economics, labour supply, Public Choice, survivor principle Tags: creative destruction, regressive left, taxation and entrepreneurship, taxation and innovation, taxation and labour supply, taxation and savings
Jun 01, 2021 @ 18:37:04
Denmark’s traditional strength in machinery and engineering and its strong educational system has become the basis for a thriving robotics industry based in Odense, the country’s third-largest city.
More than 120 robotics companies already exist in this city of 200,000 people, and a high-tech ecosystem of robot and automation companies, suppliers, and education and research facilities continues to evolve.
Danish robots are developed with the human in mind, creating better safety and increasing usability in production lines.
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Jun 01, 2021 @ 18:39:56
What do Skype, Google Maps and Lego bricks have in common?
They were all invented by Danes!
https://studyindenmark.dk/why-denmark/quality-of-life-1/denmark-an-innovation-leader
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Jun 01, 2021 @ 19:37:28
The Danish pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk is one of the largest companies in Scandinavia in terms of market value, and has held a leadership position in diabetes care for decades. It supplies half of the world’s insulin for diabetics.
Innovative pharmaceutical products are also produced by Lundbeck and LEO Pharma, two other Danish companies, as well as a wide range of newer and smaller biotech companies.
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