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Learning Business Social Development

Author Name: John Lok | Format: Paperback | Genre : Business, Investing & Management | Other Details

My economic perspective is rooted in the "Endogenous Growth Theory," which suggests that investment in human capital, innovation, and knowledge are significant contributors to economic growth.

My viewargues that student interest serves as the catalyst for this investment. When students are engaged, they are more likely to pursue advanced degrees and specialize in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) or creative fields, which are the primary engines of modern economic expansion,emphasizes that the "interest-driven" learner is more likely to engage in entrepreneurial activities, as the curiosity fostered in the classroom translates into the problem-solving skills required to launch new businesses and industries.Furthermore, my view notes that raising learning interest reduces "educational wastage"—the economic loss associated with high dropout rates and underemployment—thereby maximizing the return on public investment in education.

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John Lok

    I had graduated business Administration Science Degree in Common Wealth Open University.

My view argues that the invention and adoption of specific technologies, such as the smartphone or non-manual driving public transport, serve as catalysts for changing consumer shopping emotions and increasing passenger numbers, respectively.These behavioral shifts are essential for translating technical innovation into long-term global economic growth. He emphasizes that "smart" technology improves service performance by aligning with human psychological factors, thereby influencing supply and demand dynamics in modern societies.

Technology as a Catalyst for Behavioral Change
A central tenet of my  view is that technology drives growth by exciting global societies and altering the "industrious" nature of the household. By examining the transition from manual to automated systems,  explores how technology can induce positive emotional responses in consumers, which sustains demand even during potential recessionary periods, suggests that the "technology service and manufacturing period" we currently inhabit requires a new understanding of how human behavior influences social change. Specifically, he investigates whether technology can foster a "positive consumer shopping emotion," which he identifies as a critical component for microeconomic stability and macroeconomic expansion.

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