Annually
in sentence
839 examples of Annually in a sentence
The Best Ways to Fight Extreme PovertyCOPENHAGEN – In 1950, people in South Korea and Pakistan earned roughly the same amount of money
annually.
Thus, the $60 price decline since last August will redistribute more than $2 trillion
annually
to oil consumers, providing a bigger income boost than the combined US and Chinese fiscal stimulus in 2009.
So why is Europe proposing to accept a paltry 20,000-40,000 people
annually
for resettlement?
Former Minister of Trade and Industry Mohammad al-Samadi estimates that Iraqis buy more than $500 million of Jordanian goods
annually.
Providing a credible security force to cope with all of these risks would cost about $2 billion annually, but the benefits – from a significant reduction in the risk of conflict and faster economic growth – are between 11.5 and 39 times higher.
Starved for ScienceAMSTERDAM – In the Mekong Delta, farmers obtain 6-7 tons of rice per hectare in dry seasons and 4-5 tons per hectare in wet seasons, using fast-maturing rice varieties that allow up to three consecutive yields
annually.
By contrast, West African rice farmers harvest only 1.5 tons per hectare of traditional upland rice annually, while other cereals yield no more than one ton – a figure comparable to yields in medieval Europe.
Nevertheless, regional discrepancies remain massive: cows in the Netherlands can produce roughly 9,000 liters of milk annually, while Zebu cattle in the tropics produce only about 300 liters.
Although the estimated number of people contracting TB
annually
is decreasing, the decline has been very slow.
Of the estimated €1.73 billion ($2 billion) that is needed
annually
for research and development, only €589 million was invested in 2013.
And, in the United States, schools play a central role in preventing flu transmission, averting an estimated 63 million cases
annually.
The problem is that the manufacturing sector does little to create jobs, largely because relatively high productivity growth in the sector – averaging more than 10%
annually
over the last two decades – constrains demand for more workers.
In fact, for many economies, professional management of public assets could generate more revenues
annually
than corporate taxes, drastically increasing the amount of funding available for infrastructure investment.
Headlines about the launch were truly alarming: Over the next 18 years, global warming would kill 100 million people and cost the economy upwards of $6.7 trillion
annually.
To put this in context, the Paris climate agreement’s promises will cost more than $1 trillion
annually
and deliver carbon cuts worth much less – most likely every dollar spent will prevent climate damage worth a couple of cents.
The compact, signed by all European Union member states except the United Kingdom and the Czech Republic, obliges governments among other things to reduce their (smoothed) debt/GDP ratio
annually
by one-twentieth of the difference between the actual debt/GDP ratio and the Maastricht limit of 60%.
The estimated $2.6 trillion that they earn
annually
exceeds the GDP of the United Kingdom, the world’s sixth-largest economy.
While the US accounts for only 4.5% of the world’s population, its consumers spend $10.3 trillion
annually
– by far the most in the world.
In the EU, the cost of these and related mental health problems is estimated to average 3-4% of GNP, amounting to approximately 265 billion euros
annually.
At a cost of hundreds of billions of dollars annually, it will have virtually no impact on climate change.
Making these reductions would cost about €200-350 billion
annually
by 2030 – less than 1% of projected global GDP in 2030.
Moreover, it could save over two million lives annually, while preventing the loss of more than 30 million tons of crops per year.
Even in the best-case scenario for maximizing existing prevention and treatment, at least a half-million new HIV infections would occur
annually
in low- and middle-income countries by 2050.
In cattle production alone, economic losses amount to an estimated $1-1.2 billion annually, with total agricultural losses reaching roughly $4.75 billion.
Recognizing the link between economic growth and poverty reduction, those who crafted the UN’s Millennium Development Goals (MDG’s) estimated that halving poverty by 2015 in Africa requires countries to achieve an average minimum growth rate of 7%
annually.
Meanwhile, more than half of the 36% of Americans who earn less than $50,000
annually
voted for Clinton, and of the remaining 64% of voters, 49% and 47% chose Trump and Clinton, respectively.
After all, the US gets a million new citizens
annually
from Latin America, mostly Mexico, and the Italian population grows
annually
by 90,000 Africans.
For this, I have to pay Goldman Sachs the yield that it would receive from the bond – around 5%
annually
at that price, so about 2.5%, or €250,000 – during the six-month term.
China’s Education RevolutionBEIJING – Over the last 35 years, China’s strong and sustained output growth – averaging more than 9.5%
annually
– has driven the miraculous transformation of a rural, command economy into a global economic superpower.
Indeed, the projected costs of this approach – some $5 trillion
annually
by mid-century – are so much greater than its likely benefits that it makes no sense to call it a solution at all.
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