Cohort
in sentence
112 examples of Cohort in a sentence
Add to this the mismanagement of ethnic and religious diversity, stir in a large and growing
cohort
of unemployed and digitally connected youth, and the continent offers ideal conditions for mayhem.
Indeed, of the 20.2-percentage-point increase in aggregate household savings (as a share of GDP) in China from 1992 to 2009, the middle-aged
cohort
accounted for more than 60% (the remainder was largely attributable to the elderly).
The first
cohort
of fellows, who recently published their findings in the IDS Bulletin, included ten African doctoral students working in the social sciences.
This elderly
cohort
holds what the economists Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson call de jure political power, that is, decision-making power allocated by constitutions or electoral systems.
And if each new
cohort
of workers is much larger than the one before, growth in per capita capital stock – whether in infrastructure or plant and equipment – is held back.
For starters, a significant
cohort
of Leave voters tends to be “politically disengaged.”
But reaching one
cohort
per year is too little to meet demands in a fast-changing economy.
And, despite concerns about the EU’s “democratic deficit,” this
cohort
seems to appreciate the potential for political participation.
The first set of schools has now received funding, and the first
cohort
of the most at-risk girls has been relocated to government schools in safer regions of the country.
A bad year for recruitment in a fished-down stock means losing both the new
cohort
and most of the spawners, because the latter are caught before they can spawn again.
Such growth presupposes a credible strategy to pare the deficit, which means a plan that recognizes the reality of the growing
cohort
of pensioners.
Women have stood above the rest in the opposition, because they are, in many ways, the antithesis of right-wing populism, support for which comes primarily from poorly educated white men – the demographic
cohort
with the least comprehension of feminism.
The private sector’s enthusiastic involvement helps make the case for the bright side of the refugee influx: it can help close Europe’s demographic deficit, plug gaps in its labor market, and supply a
cohort
of young workers and taxpayers for the future.
Where is this remarkable
cohort
to come from?
Engagement was voluntary, but the whole
cohort
was included in the measurement of the results.
And the appointment of Igor Kholmanskikh, a tank factory foreman who had offered to come to Moscow with a burly
cohort
of his fellow assembly-line workers to defend Putin’s regime, to rule the vast Ural region will not scare them.
A huge
cohort
of young people lacking the skills necessary for this century – let alone last century – is emerging, particularly in the world’s most marginalized and volatile countries.
The following autumn, in 2000, the next
cohort
of students also picked Sorcerer’s Stone for the final text, and, like their peers, they confidently dismissed it.
And in just a decade, this
cohort
has almost tripled in size, becoming particularly concentrated in the country’s south.
Without an overhaul of the existing policy framework, the skill bias of automation will continue to broaden, placing an even larger
cohort
of workers at risk.
Usually, a small
cohort
of the ultra-rich controls the country’s natural resources while millions live in poverty.
Its largest population
cohort
comprises people in their mid-50s, who were born just before the pill-induced drop in birthrates.
In today’s context, stronger US growth has tightened the labor market, such that wages for low earners are rising faster than those of any other
cohort.
Remember, in normal times (before 2007-08), one-fifth of prime-age Americans were neither employed nor looking for a job; but now, an extra 5% of the population has been added to this
cohort.
While the middle class has shrunk, a growing
cohort
of working-class white people has fallen into despair.
Over the past decade, the share of the continent’s under-20 population has expanded by more than 25%, and is projected to be the continent’s largest age
cohort
by 2070.
(In fact, representatives of this
cohort
had shared power in various forms for decades, but had grown increasingly ambitious in the process.)
We have all the ingredients we need to succeed, starting with a growing population – including a large and increasingly educated
cohort
of young people – and a favorable trade and investment environment.
Despite all the attention paid to climate marches and other youth-led political movements, a new
cohort
of young voters is unlikely to change this trend.
Over the past decade, a narrow
cohort
of what the OECD calls “frontier firms” have accounted for almost all productivity growth globally, while “laggard companies” – that is, all other firms – have made essentially no productivity gains at all.
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