Dividend
in sentence
202 examples of Dividend in a sentence
This is an extraordinarily high
dividend
in the world oil industry.
As a result, Brazil may not be as well positioned to take advantage of its demographic
dividend
(when a rising share of working-age people creates new opportunities for economic growth) as its leaders believe.
In the next 10-15 years, Brazil will have a tremendous opportunity to capitalize on its demographic
dividend.
Of course, Merkel will be remembered as the chancellor of the “peace dividend” and, possibly, as the last chancellor of the post-war (West) German party system.
In the future, virtually all of the information connected to a bank account will be reported to the tax authorities of the account holder’s country, including the account holder’s name, balance, interest and
dividend
income, and capital gains.
Nowhere is this truer than in India, where the value of the current demographic
dividend
hinges on a grossly underutilized resource pool – the female workforce.
The public venture funds’ share of profits from the commercialization of new technologies would be returned to ordinary citizens in the form of a “social innovation”
dividend
– an income stream that would supplement workers’ earnings from the labor market.
For African countries to capitalize on this demographic dividend, the future workforce must be educated, trained, and have adequate employment opportunities.
Striving to involve young people across Africa and Europe in decisions that impact them, now and in the future, this initiative aims to showcase strategies for bringing Africa and Europe together to address challenges such as the demographic
dividend.
Africa’s success relies on its ability to harness its demographic
dividend
by equipping its youth with technological and innovative skills, which will be a catalyst for economic growth.
As our demographic
dividend
matures, governments, institutions, and organizations must help position young people for success.
A broad range of companies have joined the Climate Leadership Council and endorsed a carbon tax and
dividend
plan.
Microlending is certainly a useful supplement to tested anti-poverty policy instruments – and one that pays an extra
dividend
insofar as it aids women.
During this time, the global economy benefited from the confluence of several unique developments: an information and communications revolution; a “peace dividend” resulting from the end of the Cold War; and the implementation of market reforms in many former communist and other developing economies.
Moreover, many companies boosted their quarterly
dividend
payouts to shareholders.
That’s why our plan calls for combining the carbon tax with a “cash dividend” to households.
Each household would receive the same “carbon dividend” for each adult and half that amount for each child.
The
dividend
would not depend on the amount of carbon tax that households pay.
Thus, the carbon tax would provide the right incentive by being proportionate to the payer’s emissions, while the carbon
dividend
would cause about two-thirds of all households to receive more in cash than they pay in carbon taxes.
A carbon tax of $40 per ton would produce enough revenue to give a four-person household a $2,000 annual
dividend.
A simple policy would be to enact legislation requiring that a percentage of capital stock (shares) from every initial public offering (IPO) be channeled into a Commons Capital Depository, with the associated dividends funding a universal basic
dividend
(UBD).
The main result of monetary stimulus has been to boost asset prices: anything that pays a yield, a dividend, or a rent becomes much more attractive - and hence much more valuable in money terms - when interest rates are very low and expected to stay very low.
Unfortunately, it can no longer count on the so-called “peace dividend” that it enjoyed in the past (and even during the euro crisis).
Moreover, the demographic
dividend
from fewer dependents and more people in the workforce would accelerate economic growth.
After all, as Premier Li Keqiang has put it, “reforms will pay the biggest
dividend
for China.”
The big danger, if growth peters out, is that the euro may not produce the employment
dividend
on which governments are counting.
In The State Of The World’s Children 2007 , UNICEF reports that gender equality renders a double dividend: healthy, educated women rear healthy, educated children.
Indeed, the “double dividend” is a curse rather than a blessing, because it confines women to the home.
There is a lot of goodwill to ensure a democratic
dividend
for these countries, while of course managing expectations.
Investors may be better protected, for example, when
dividend
rights are tightly linked to voting rights through the one-share-one-vote principle.
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