Annually
in sentence
839 examples of Annually in a sentence
Again, Washington lobbyists have bought into the absurd claim of trade experts such as Fred Bergsten that the gain from Doha, as it stands now, is a paltry $7 billion or so
annually.
The most significant deliverable of the OECD’s BEPS initiative lies in its new country-by-country reporting requirements, which force multinationals to provide aggregate information annually, in each jurisdiction where they do business, relating to the global allocation of income and taxes paid.
By continuing to shunt Roma children into “special” schools, where expectations are low and results still lower, EU member states are squandering hundreds of millions of euros
annually
in productivity and tax revenues.
In Nigeria, for example, 80 million people have no access to electricity, and another 60 million spend $13 billion
annually
to run polluting diesel generators, which could be displaced by mini-grids.
But more than $2 billion is needed
annually.
More important, the economic burden of TB has been put as high as $20 billion
annually
– and even higher if the losses in human capital are included.
In addition, Japan spends $40 billion
annually
on defense, and has one of the top five military forces in the world.
The Third World Center for Water Management estimates that nearly 40% of food produced
annually
in India is lost, mainly during harvesting and distribution.
An estimated 10 million weddings occur in India
annually.
Pirate fishing – often called illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing – deprives an estimated half-billion law-abiding fishermen and their communities of up to $23 billion worth of seafood
annually.
Famously, few people know who even holds Switzerland’s
annually
rotating presidency.
One of the most glaring features of this pattern is the disparity between China’s GDP growth, which has averaged nearly 10%
annually
over the last few decades, and its employment growth, which has amounted to just 1-2%
annually.
The service sector, by contrast, experienced much slower labor-productivity growth (about 5%
annually
over the same period), meaning that it could be far more effective in generating employment growth.
In order to cap the rise in labor costs, wages were suppressed, growing by only 5%
annually
over the last 20 years, even as productivity grew at an annual rate of 8.5%.
Assuming that the US economy maintains its long-term growth rate of 2%, China would have to grow by 3.7%
annually.
Europe and the United States were the largest meat consumers in the twentieth century, with the average person eating 60-90 kilograms (132-198 pounds)
annually
– far more than is required to meet humans’ nutritional needs.
America’s shale-gas industry grew by 45%
annually
from 2005 to 2010, and the share of shale gas in America’s overall gas production grew from 4% to 24%.
Other spending is split between the
annually
appropriated amounts (known as non-defense discretionary spending) and the programs in which spending follows from established rules that are not subject to annual review (known as the “mandatory” spending programs, primarily Social Security retirement benefits and health-care spending).
Businesses could also save on labor costs, to the tune of 25 billion hours annually, by swapping cash transactions for digital payments.
But it will have to sustain labor productivity growth of at least 5%
annually
for the next 15-20 years – an outcome that will depend on rising urbanization and deepening technological progress.
As a report from UNESCO recently highlighted, China, which now spends more than $100 billion
annually
(2.5% of GDP) on R&D, is on the verge of surpassing the US and Europe in terms of the number of researchers.
Though it is too early to draw definitive conclusions, in the long run storms may contribute more significantly to the global costs of disasters, which already exceed $100 billion
annually.
“[I]f the US were getting good value from the extra…$750 billion diverted
annually
from paying people who make directly useful goods and provide directly useful services, it would be obvious in the statistics.”
Were it not for such imitative consumption, non-rich households would have saved, on average, more than $800
annually
in recent years.
The EU’s fiscal charter compels member states
annually
to reduce their public debt by one-twentieth of the amount by which it exceeds 60% of GDP.
The member states have transferred their seignorage rights to the ECB, and the ECB is currently earning about €25 billion ($32.7 billion)
annually.
The US comes in a distant second, emitting about five billion metric tons
annually.
In that case, the UK might no longer grow at 2.75% annually, but say at closer to 2%.
Today, the disease has a truly global impact, claiming 1.8 million lives
annually
– the equivalent of wiping out the population of Washington, DC, three times every year.
There are 2.4 million new infections
annually
and 34 million people living with HIV/AIDS who require treatment to stay alive.
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