Annual
in sentence
2845 examples of Annual in a sentence
Since NAFTA was signed in December 1992, Mexico’s economy has grown at an average
annual
rate of barely over 1% in per capita terms.
Vietnam, however, grew at an
annual
rate of 5.6% per capita between the onset of its economic reforms in 1988 and the establishment of diplomatic relations with the US in 1995, and has continued to grow at a rapid 4.5% pace since then.
India, soon to be the world’s most populous country, has lately been experiencing an impressive 7-8%
annual
rate of GDP growth.
According to Lesotho’s National AGOA Strategy, the country’s
annual
garment exports to the US increased from about $129 million in 2001 to $330 million in 2015, representing 80% of total external demand for the country’s textiles and garments.
Commercial real-estate prices have been rising at a 10%
annual
pace for the past five years.
From 1978 to 2003,
annual
real GDP growth in China averaged 8.1% while growth in Mexico – the fastest in Latin America, barely reached 1% a year.
Anderson showed that if developing countries cut their tariffs by the same proportion as high-income countries, and services and investment were also liberalized, the
annual
global gains could climb to $120 billion, with $17 billion going to the world's poorest countries by 2015.
This means that over time, the advantage of moving toward freer trade grows dramatically bigger: the $120 billion benefit in 2015 grows to many trillions of dollars of
annual
benefits by the end of the century.
South Korea liberalized trade in 1965, Chile in 1974, and India in 1991; all saw
annual
growth rates increase by several percentage points thereafter.
If we recast these benefits as
annual
installments, a realistic Doha outcome could increase global income by more than $3 trillion every year throughout this century.
While
annual
trade between the countries has soared during this period, from $20 billion to more than $100 billion,
annual
US-China trade is worth six times more, and the political relationship has had ups and downs.
Market-oriented reforms in the early 1990s changed that pattern, and
annual
growth accelerated to 7% under the Congress party, before slumping to 5%.
India also has significant military power, with an estimated 90-100 nuclear weapons, intermediate-range missiles, 1.3 million military personnel, and
annual
military expenditure of nearly $50 billion (3% of the world total).
Likewise, India’s
annual
per capita income of $1,760 is just one-fifth that of China.
The
annual
cost per pupil would be $32.
Globally, the solar-power industry has grown at an average
annual
rate of 57% since 2006.
Moreover, if British Prime Minister Theresa May follows through on her stated goal of reducing
annual
net immigration to less than 100,000, the UK would have to implement drastic – potentially costly – measures to close off the UK labor market.
According to the World Bank’s
annual
assessment of Global Economic Prospects, India’s economy could even triple in size in the next 15 to 20 years.
That is the equivalent of
annual
emissions in the Netherlands.
The global plastic industry, with
annual
revenues of about $750 billion, surely could find a few hundred million dollars to help clean up the mess it created.
Direct spending on private contractors’ services now consumes roughly 70% of the
annual
US intelligence budget (estimated at around $70 billion).
The Global Green-Investment ShiftBEIJING – Climate negotiators from around the world are headed for their
annual
pre-Christmas gathering, this year in Warsaw, with the goal of setting out concrete steps toward a binding global climate deal in 2015.
More serious is the Republicans’ proposal for an
annual
audit of the United States Federal Reserve.
While Paul would go further, and abolish the Fed altogether, several bills in the US Congress have mandated an
annual
audit; earlier this year, one such bill was passed by the House of Representatives (but not the Senate).
With official figures widely discredited, private analysts estimate that consumer prices are rising at an
annual
rate of 25% or more.
For example, the US monetary base rose at an
annual
rate of 9% from 1985 to 1995, and then slowed to 6% in the next decade.
From 2005 to 2015, the monetary base soared at an
annual
rate of 17.8%, whereas the CPI increased at an
annual
rate of just 1.9%.
That is clearly reflected in the difference between the -0.2%
annual
inflation rate for goods and the 2.5% rate for services (over the past 12 months).
As a result, total compensation per hour is rising more rapidly, with the
annual
rate increasing to 3.1% in the first quarter of 2015, from 2.5% in 2014 as a whole and 1.1% in 2013.
Annual
spending per school-aged child in Sub-Saharan Africa is roughly one-third of the minimum needed.
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