Estimating
in sentence
62 examples of Estimating in a sentence
I still do a lot of that, mainly for
estimating.
And like most glaciologists right now, I'm working on the problem of
estimating
how much the ice is going to contribute to sea level rise in the future.
The failure to account for vulture scavenging can result in forensic scientists inaccurately
estimating
how long someone has been dead and then searching through the wrong missing person's files.
So, when did they finally figure out the exact value instead of just
estimating?
People are horrible at
estimating
both of these things, and that's what I want to talk to you about today.
There are two kinds of errors people make when trying to decide what the right thing is to do, and those are errors in
estimating
the odds that they're going to succeed, and errors in
estimating
the value of their own success.
Now,
estimating
odds, as difficult as it may seem, is a piece of cake compared to trying to estimate value: trying to say what something is worth, how much we'll enjoy it, how much pleasure it will give us.
I think that people are under
estimating
this incredible film.
Indeed, given the difficulty in
estimating
the total size of resources, many consider peak oil theories irrelevant.
The late economist Anthony Clunies Ross made an initial attempt to calculate the cost of solving the poverty problem forever, by
estimating
how much money would be needed for cash transfers to lift every single person on the planet out of poverty.
Education economists, for example, analyzed the best education solutions for Bangladesh,
estimating
the costs and benefits of each.
Developing Countries and the Global CrisisNEW YORK – This year is likely to be the worst for the global economy since World War II, with the World Bank
estimating
a decline of up to 2%.
Independent expert panels, insulated from political pressures, are responsible for
estimating
the long-run trends that determine whether a given deficit is deemed structural or cyclical.
This correlation is reinforced by the convergence hypothesis – the benchmark theory for
estimating
an economy’s potential growth rate – which states that a rapidly growing developing economy’s real growth rate will slow when it reaches a certain share of the per capita capital stock and income of an advanced economy.
Estimating
on the basis of data from the US Energy Information Agency (EIA) from the first five months of 2012, this year’s expected CO2 emissions have declined by more than 800 million tons, or 14%, from their peak in 2007.
To get a good picture of banks’ financial health,
estimating
the value of their toxic assets is unavoidable.
After all, with the Chinese economy undergoing wholesale economic transformation,
estimating
a long-term equilibrium exchange rate that will anchor speculation is virtually impossible, particularly given persistent doubts about data quality, disclosure, and opaque policymaking processes.
To be sure, the European Commission promised to create a single digital market two years ago,
estimating
that it could boost the EU economy by €415 billion ($448.5 billion) annually.
In other words, economic growth will turn out to be structurally much lower than is the figures used now for
estimating
deficits and debt.
But, with some military experts
estimating
that the probability of war now surpasses 50%, complacency is not an option.
Americans have a long history of incorrectly
estimating
their power.
They must come up with a credible method for
estimating
the underlying equilibrium price of oil.
In the absence of detailed and reliable reporting from all countries, the British government commissioned a series of reports on AMR,
estimating
that by 2050, as many as ten million people could die annually from AMR complications.
Beyond looking at purchasing power parity, we also have models for
estimating
real-exchange-rate (RER) equilibrium, such as by identifying the exchange rate at which a country can achieve a sustainable current-account balance, or the rate that would allow an economy to reach full employment.
Moreover, if financial institutions follow their own risk assessments when
estimating
appropriate capital cushions, the costs associated with such provisions decline.
Despite efforts to give it precision,
estimating
political risk is not an exact science.
In
estimating
political risk today, analysts must pay particular attention to the character of the political system.
There is a well-established method for
estimating
reserves yet to be found, and whether one examines currently proven reserves or future projections, one fact stands out: conventional gas supplies are distributed unevenly around the world-and in places far from most consumers.
Tracing the precise consequences of policy measures or institutional reforms – and
estimating
when they might “pay off” – is hopelessly complex.
The Bank of England has acknowledged that trade-off,
estimating
that productivity would have been 1-3% higher in the UK had it raised interest rates to pre-crisis levels in the recovery phase.
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