According
in sentence
5153 examples of According in a sentence
This implies that the ECB presidency is not counted among the posts to be distributed
according
to nationality quotas, and that Draghi’s nationality is not regarded as having influenced his decisions in any way.
According
to a 2010 McKinsey study, the two countries are expected to account for 62% of the growth in the continent’s urban population between 2005 and 2025, and a staggering 40% of such growth worldwide.
But,
according
to McKinsey, China has been more proactive than India in planning for rapid urbanization, demonstrating that it has the capacity and the resources to address environmental challenges.
According
to the WHO, of the 4.3 million annual deaths resulting from “indoor air pollution” (burning of solid fuels), nearly one-third (1.3 million) occur in India.
The gangs are now more organized in El Salvador because the authorities confine many of them in separate jails
according
to their specific group.
You might also want to rethink Eugene Fama’s efficient markets hypothesis,
according
to which prices of financial assets always reflect all available information about economic fundamentals.
According
to Forbes, only two of the ten wealthiest individuals in 2015 (Bill Gates and Warren Buffett) were in the top ten in 2006.
The rest of the RePEC top 200 tend to be Caucasian men in their 60s and older – roughly three decades past the age when an economic or scientific author is generally most innovative,
according
to research by the economist Benjamin Jones.
The World
According
to TrumpPARIS – The word “trump,”
according
to the dictionary, is an alteration of the word triumph.
According
to the League of Nations, Smoot-Hawley triggered “an outburst of tariff-making activities in other countries, at least partly by way of reprisals,” with substantial duty hikes made almost immediately by Canada, Cuba, France, Italy, Mexico, and Spain.
According
to Chirac, France’s exports are lagging not because France is losing its international competitiveness – although it is, especially to Germany – but because of the strong euro.
According
to the African Union’s High Level Panel on Illicit Flows, chaired by former South African President Thabo Mbeki, Africa loses more than $50 billion every year from illicit financial outflows.
And Latin America is growing, by 6% last year and an estimated 4.75% in 2011,
according
to the International Monetary Fund.
Not surprisingly, South America is growing much faster than its neighbors to the North – 4.4 versus 2.7% in 2010-11,
according
to a recent Inter-American Development Bank report.
Thus, it is important to note how little - if any - ground America has gained relative to Europe in the past decade
according
to the yardstick of social welfare.
According
to WEF Chairman Klaus Schwab, the Fourth Industrial Revolution is beginning now, “characterized by a much more ubiquitous and mobile Internet, by smaller and more powerful sensors that have become cheaper, and by artificial intelligence and machine learning.”
According
to UNHCR official Alessandra Morelli, the tens of thousands of Syrian refugees arriving on the Greek island of Lesbos “know exactly where they have to go, who they have to talk to.
According
to a 2007 study of Lebanon’s copyright-based industries, conducted by the World Intellectual Property Organization, the main challenges facing the country’s software sector – an important part of its economy – include restricted markets, intense competition, a brain drain (loss of human capital), inadequate technology policy, a lack of government incentives, and rampant piracy.
According
to a 2010 United Nations report on the creative economy, global trade in creative goods grew at an annual rate of 14% from 2002 to 2008.
According
to the American Association for the Advancement of Science, federal funding for research and development in 2017 fell by 23.6% in real terms compared to 2007.
According
to the World Food Program, 70% of the population lack food security.
According
to Timothy Snyder, author of Bloodlands, 2-3 million people died in the forced labor camps of the Gulag and perhaps a million were shot during the Great Terror of the late 1930’s.
According
to the US government, if there are no supply disruptions, and the American economy grows at an annual rate of 3%, the price of a barrel of oil will decline to $25 (in 2003 dollars) in 2010 and then rise to $30 in 2025.
According
to a 2013 European Parliament report, some of the $10 billion invested by Saudi Arabia for “its Wahhabi agenda” in South and Southeast Asia was “diverted” to terrorist groups, including Lashkar-e-Taiba, which carried out the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks.
But,
according
to a recent US State Department report, some Saudi-based charities and individual donors continue to fund Sunni militants.
The key to boosting those gains,
according
to the IADB, is to adopt a new strategy that expands access across and within markets.
According
to the conventional wisdom of many environmental campaigners, we should first do everything we can to mitigate global warming, and only then focus on adaptation strategies.
And,
according
to the World Economic Forum, is topped only by the U.S. and China in an index that combines growth prospects with economic size.
What should matter is not inequality per se – to paraphrase the gospel
according
to Matthew, the rich will always be with us – but rather whether citizens have a genuine opportunity to become rich, or at least become substantially better off.
But no one can deny that some individuals do face discrimination because of their “religion”
(according
to a recent Pew survey, 45% of Europeans have a negative image of Islam).
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