Estimated
in sentence
1236 examples of Estimated in a sentence
Afghanistan’s total
estimated
public expenditure for the next five years (2017-2021) is $60 billion.
Almost a third of all African financial wealth – a total of $500 billion – was held offshore in tax havens in 2014, costing African countries an
estimated
$14 billion per year in lost tax revenues.
For starters, improved access to contraception would prevent an
estimated
one-third of all maternal deaths, and would have a particularly large impact among those facing the highest risk.
An
estimated
3,000 drone killings have taken place, mostly in Pakistan, but also in Yemen and Somalia.
As of 2010, there were an
estimated
1.6 billion Muslims worldwide; there are obviously far fewer Islamist terrorists.
In addition to the use of chemical weapons, the United Nations estimates that 2.5 million civilians lack food, water, and medicines, because some towns and villages are too hard to reach, with an
estimated
250,000 people completely cut off from outside help.
In Turkey, an
estimated
200,000 refugees are in official camps, but at least twice that number are struggling alone in towns and cities.
To some banks, this is just collateral damage: millions of Americans – in addition to the
estimated
four million in 2008 and 2009 – still have to be thrown out of their homes.
All told, Putin’s son-in-law was worth an
estimated
$1.3 billion by the time he was 34.
CAR’s Muslim population has dropped from an
estimated
15% to less than 5%.
Universal vaccination for the pneumococcal vaccine alone would lead to an
estimated
annual reduction of 11.4 million days of antibiotics for children under five.
A 12% tax increase has been imposed on gas-guzzling cars, along with reductions for cars with small-engines, and a new 5% tax is being levied on wooden flooring and even chopsticks, which are
estimated
to use two million cubic meters of timber each year.
Trump’s War Policy in SyriaLONDON – Clearly, the last word has not been said about the chemical weapons attack on Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib Province, Syria, on April 4, which left 85 dead and an
estimated
555 injured.
At that point, an
estimated
$100 trillion in global GDP will already have been lost.
In the month of May, before the summer's searing and deadly heat, local authorities
estimated
a daily average of 1,000 migrants attempting to cross.
For $286 million we could get iodized salt and fortified basic food items to 80% of those in the worst-affected areas, with benefits
estimated
to be roughly nine times that sum.
Subsidies combined with a bloated civil service (there are over 2 million state employees) generate chronic budget deficits,
estimated
at 5% of GDP in 1998-99.
Lack of water and sanitation is
estimated
to cause at least 300,000 deaths each year.
Previous generations’ use of lead in paints and gasoline is
estimated
to cause almost 700,000 deaths annually.
At one point during this clandestine assault, an
estimated
400,000 bots – software applications that run automated scripts – sent millions of fictitious political messages, which in turn generated some 20% of all Twitter traffic during the final month of the campaign.
China’s microblogs, or social networks, where usage tends be most intense, were
estimated
to have approximately 270 million users as of late 2011.
That gap – between actual and potential output – is
estimated
at more than 7% of GDP (more than $1 trillion).
Roughly 300,000 people are
estimated
to have made the crossing in 2014 – more than twice as many as in 2013.
At the end of 2014, UNHCR, the United Nations agency for refugees,
estimated
that there were 59.5 million forcibly displaced people worldwide, the highest level ever recorded.
Each year, there would be an
estimated
640,000 fewer newborn deaths, 150,000 fewer maternal deaths, and 600,000 fewer children losing their mothers – yielding economic benefits of roughly $145 billion.
Fewer kids also means that a larger share of the population would be working, boosting the economy by an
estimated
$288 billion annually for a generation.
The great majority of the roughly 24 million private individuals
estimated
to have gone into business between 1980 and 2005 were ordinary folk with very small capital – usually obtained by pooling the savings of family members and perhaps friends.
In Europe alone, the annual health-care costs and productivity losses associated with AMR already total an
estimated
€1.5 billion ($1.7 billion).
In 2013 alone, the EITC lifted an
estimated
6.5 million people – including 3.3 million children – out of poverty, and mitigated the circumstances of poverty for an additional 21 million people.
Beyond being a moral travesty, childhood poverty costs the US an
estimated
$500 billion per year (nearly 4% of GDP) in terms of forgone future earnings, higher crime rates, and increased health-care costs for these children.
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