The answer, unfortunately, is the very culprit caught in a u. S. China tugofwar right now. Details on what can boost chinas productivity and whether they could gain access to it september 1st is when drug Price Reductions are set to take effect and one of our guests says it will make the entire largecap pharma space vulnerable and it will hit five names first. We have those details ahead. If thats not enough, dom chu has a look at the market you and i have been up very early and we are still upright right now and kelly, if you look at the board behind me, youll see things havent change a lot from when we were on in squawk box this morning, but we have seen an acceleration in the Technology Trade well get whats driving that sentiment in a couple of minutes here and the dow industrials are just about flat on the session and thats pretty much unchanged. The s p 500 is up 18 points and onehalf of 1 and 18 points at the highs of the day we were up roughly 22 points there and down 11 at the
Economist george borhaus examines impact of immigration on u. S. Economy. Astro physicist, explore questions of the universe. American enterprise institutes reports on the decline in the employment of american men. And National Book Award Winning biographer recalls the life of organized crime boss al capone. That is a a few of programs you see on booktv. For the schedule, to to booktv. Org. 72 hours of nonstop books and authors this veterans day weekend. We kick off the threeday weekend with Julian Guthrie and the look at privatized spaceflight. These lovely director chairs. All right. Welcome, everyone. Welcome to the Space Gallery here at museum of flight. My name is jeff nunn. I amed adjunct curator of space history here at the museum. Doing king sends his regards and regrets. He is unfortunately unavailable to be here tonight as he has taken ill. I would like to begin thanking our special featured speaker, author, Julian Guthrie and dave moore. [applause] and also the team from csp
Brought to you as a Public Service by your local cable or satellite provider. Aneesh chopra, in your book, innovative state, the first three words are government doesnt work. Why do you say that . Guest i think it captures the spirit if you ask the American People in general, are you satisfied, the numbers are at an alltime low, and the perception is it isnt working. And even early days in the Obama Administration we saw some of the more challenging launches of services that really we shouldnt expect today in successful, modern, techdriven economy. And closing this gap was a big part of the motivation both for my term of duty in Public Service as well as why i wanted to write the book. Host the subtitle is how new technologies can transform government. Guest yes. Host how does the u. S. Government use technology, and does it do it successfully . Guest well, were moving in the right direction, to be sure. I try to spend a lot of my time thinking about American History in the book. You g
That really we shouldnt expect today in successful, modern, techdriven economy, and closing this gap was a big part of the motivation, both for my term of duty in Public Service as well as i wanted to write the book. Host the subtitle is how new technologies can transform government. How does the u. S. Government use technology and does it do it successfully. Guest were moving in the right direction, i think about American History in the book. Go back to our founding fathers. We have had a long tradition of having government keep pace and often lead the private sector in the use of technology to solve problems. I noted, for example, one of the Founding Technology oz ibm had its origins in a Census Bureau employee who face seemingly irsurmountmentables to calculate the number of people in the country. So governments have long history of being innovative and the capability to deliver Better Services, and the last several decades we have sign a divergence in the capacity in the private se
Of the motivation both for my term of duty in Public Service as well as why i wanted to write the book. Your subtitle is how new technologies can transform government. How does the u. S. Government use technology and does it do it successfully . We are moving in the right direction. I try to spend a lot of my time thinking about American History in the book. If we go back to our Founding Fathers we have a long tradition of having government not just keep pace, but often lead the private sector in the use of technology to solve problems. I noted that one of the founding technologies of ibm had its origins in a Census Bureau employee who faced insurmountable odds to calculate the number of people that were in this country in the late 1800s. Governments had long history of being innovative and having the capability to solve and deliver Better Services. It has been the last several decades we have seen the big divergence between the capacity of the private sector and the capacity of the pu