Pause for thought about the wonderful world of Big Data

In an article written for the May/June issue of Intelligent Life, the columnist Ian Leslie suggested that as athletes, songwriters and other performers amass experience and information, the latter can sometimes get in the way of making good decisions.

The difference between people and machines

Technology Frontiers made me think about the difference between human beings and the technology that we build.

Agent of change

Report Summary

Agent of change: The future of technology disruption in business, is an Economist Intelligence Unit white paper, sponsored by Ricoh. The report reviews the impact that technology developments will have over the next decade on various aspects of business, including organisational structures, jobs and the workplace, customer interactions, and business models themselves. The Economist Intelligence Unit bears sole responsibility for the content of the report and this executive summary. The findings do not necessarily reflect those of the sponsor.

Balancing risk, return and capital requirements

Report Summary

Insurers have just one year until the proposed implementation date for Solvency II and preparations for the new Directive are well under way.

The Europe-wide legislation will impose stringent new capital requirements across the insurance industry, creating a more risk-focused approach to better protect policy holders and investors from future financial crises. Data management will be overhauled, while many players will be forced to rethink their product range and investment strategies.

Asia competition barometer: Precision engineering

Report Summary

Supported by Singapore’s Economic Development Board (EDB), the Economist Intelligence Unit has developed the Asia Competition Barometer with the aim of understanding the changing market dynamics in key sectors and assessing the intensity of competition in them. Drawing upon company-level data on profitability and other indicators, the Barometer quantifies the changing dynamics of competitiveness in Asia for select industries between 2004 and 2009.

Asia competition barometer: IT services

Report Summary

Supported by Singapore’s Economic Development Board (EDB), the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) has developed the Asia Competition Barometer with the aim of understanding the changing market dynamics in key sectors and assessing the intensity of competition in them. Drawing upon company-level data on profitability and other indicators, the Barometer quantifies the changing dynamics of competitiveness in Asia for select industries between 2004 and 2009.

Winners don't play dead

Winners don’t play dead: Doing more with less in an uncertain future is an Economist Intelligence Unit report, sponsored by AlixPartners. It explores ways in which companies are reshaping their business to succeed in the challenging environment that has emerged from the great recession. It also looks at the factors holding back companies from making major capital investments. What is hindering them, and what are they doing to remove the constraints?

The principal findings of the survey and a series of interviews with senior experts are as follows:

Delivering results through claims technologies

Delivering results through claims technologies is an Ernst & Young report, written by the Economist Intelligence Unit. It examines the many pressures on claims management functions today and assesses how insurers are responding to new and emerging issues in the claims environment, particularly with technology solutions.

Managing the risk in renewable energy

In 2010 global investment in new renewable energy projects exceeded investment in new fossil fuelfired plants for the first time, largely driven by a mix of renewable energy incentives and political pressure to invest in less emission-intensive energy production. Yet although investments in renewable energy plants are growing, so are the risks. Political/regulatory risk and financial risk are on the rise against a backdrop of macro-economic uncertainty, while weather-related volume risk is rising up the agenda as investments in offshore wind farms accelerate.

Getting it all together

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in Australian women. The good news is that more Australian women are surviving it than ever before, and Australia ranks highly among its developed-economy peers in terms of patients’ access to cutting-edge treatments, mortality rates and chances of long-term survival. Nevertheless, it also shares with other rich countries a rising incidence rate as its population ages. And although advanced in several senses, breast cancer control in Australia faces some unique challenges.

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