Annually
in sentence
839 examples of Annually in a sentence
Tencent, China’s largest Internet company, is now using the same strategy to compete with Alibaba, with both companies offering high rates of return – often 6-7%
annually
– to attract as many investors as possible.
Given that Americans drive roughly three trillion miles annually, saving just one cent per mile implies $30 billion in annual savings.
But, while developing-country revenues have grown 14%
annually
since 2000, average tax revenues in the poorest countries stand at only 10-14% of GDP, compared to 16-20% in middle-income countries and 20-30% in high-income countries.
Finally, with remittances exceeding $400 billion annually, there is scope to develop financial instruments that would facilitate diaspora communities’ investment in development projects.
A second key source of capital lies with private and community philanthropic foundations, which are required by US law to donate at least 5% of their assets to charitable causes
annually.
Le Pen has promised to hold a referendum on France’s membership in the eurozone, despite warnings from the Bank of France that leaving the monetary union could increase the French national debt by €30 billion ($31.8 billion)
annually.
On our current complacent path, with a meager $2 billion of public funds spent
annually
worldwide on researching and developing green energy sources, the necessary breakthroughs will not happen in time.
Without such a rescheduling, it is unlikely that Greece will be able to roll over the approximately €30 billion maturing
annually
for the next few years.
The World Health Organization estimates that 5% to 10% of all transplants performed
annually
– perhaps 63,000 in all – take place in the clinical netherworlds of China, Pakistan, Egypt, Colombia, and Eastern Europe.
Indeed, even with the turmoil of default and devaluation, and despite the usual 12-18-month lag in the impact of devaluation, Russia was growing at 5.4%
annually
by the end of 1999.
According to An agenda for a growing Europe , a report published by Oxford University Press in 2004 for the European Commission, 250,000 to 450,000 workers will go West during the first one to two years, followed by around 100,000 to 200,000
annually
thereafter.
With nominal GDP stagnating, that deficit is causing the debt/GDP ratio to rise by 10%
annually.
But, on average, there is a 74% financing gap
annually.
With aggressively scaled-up health investments, ten million lives could be saved annually, beginning in 2035.
The Guttmacher Institute estimates that fully meeting women’s need for contraception would prevent 600,000 newborn deaths and 500,000 child deaths
annually.
Global Health 2035 puts the total at an additional $70 billion dollars annually, with $1 billion of this increase allocated to family planning alone.
A case study in Bangladesh, which spends more than $9 billion on public procurement annually, found that piloting e-procurement in just one government department lowered prices by 12%, leaving more resources for other important budget priorities.
The research shows that expanding digital procurement government-wide would save $670 million
annually
– enough to increase annual public-health spending by about 50%.
The region’s 300 million-strong middle class is growing by more than 5%
annually.
Millions of rural Chinese
annually
flood into the country’s cities in search of employment; but China’s export-led growth, which previously masked the macroeconomic costs of corruption and excessive state intervention, is slowing.
And many studies show that the US far surpasses other developed countries in deaths from gun violence – 30,000 per year, most of them suicides, but more than 12,000 of them homicides – while guns injure 200,000 Americans
annually.
The current 30-year T-bill yields 3.2% annually, which means that, unless the marginal bond buyer today is unusually averse to holding 30-year Treasuries, she anticipates that short-term nominal T-bill rates will average 1% per year over the next generation.
Around the world, billions of dollars are invested
annually
to address environmental degradation and poverty; many of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals are linked in some way to these two concerns.
In the United States, the president is legally required to issue a national security strategy
annually.
The cost is tiny: reaching 80% of the world’s 140 million or so undernourished children would require a commitment of around $60 million annually, while the economic gains would eventually clear $1 billion a year.
Previous generations’ use of lead in paints and gasoline is estimated to cause almost 700,000 deaths
annually.
A recent report by the New Climate Economy suggests that, in transportation alone, a low-carbon transition would create 23 million jobs worldwide
annually.
Unfortunately, neither the resources – hundreds of millions of dollars
annually
– nor the infrastructure for distribution are available.
In the United Kingdom, a biologically-based drug costs, on average, £9,500 ($15,200) per patient annually, compared to £450 for conventional drug treatment.
African farmers spend $68 billion
annually
to reverse these declines, mostly through the application of chemical fertilizers.
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