Increased
in sentence
3875 examples of Increased in a sentence
Increased
investment and defense cooperation with Japan will add much-needed substance to India’s “Look East” policy, which could be advanced further by implementing long-planned projects with Bangladesh, Myanmar, and Thailand, as well as by building road and maritime infrastructure and strengthening trade links.
One way to gauge India’s relationship with Russia – as well as with the US and even Israel – is to allow for
increased
foreign investment in domestic defense industries, including more co-production initiatives.
Indeed, according to former US Under-Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter, stronger military cooperation and
increased
technology transfer is the most effective approach to deepening US-India ties.
In 2009, installed capacity of wind and PVs
increased
by more than 30% and 50%, respectively.
The time is ripe for a new Third Way consensus, beyond the neo-liberal Washington pensée unique: a balanced view of markets and government, a refusal to confuse means (like privatization and liberalization) with ends, and a broader conception of those ends – not higher GDP, not
increased
income for the few, but the creation of democratic, equitable, and sustained growth.
More fundamentally, it has undermined faith in the UN and international law and
increased
the world’s tolerance of inhumanity.
Abe, India’s chief guest at this year’s Republic Day celebrations, also rightly views enhanced trade as a key element in deepening the bilateral relationship, thereby contributing to substantially
increased
security.
Meanwhile, rising incomes – a goal of any development effort – nearly always means
increased
consumption of natural resources and energy, resulting in more emissions and further warming.
Educational opportunities have multiplied, air and water pollution have plummeted, and life expectancy has
increased
almost to West European levels across the region.
Increased
policy credibility will boost inflows of foreign direct investment (FDI), while EU structural funds will support further institution building, infrastructure investment, and environmental protection.
EU structural assistance has
increased
annual GDP growth, on average, by 0.4-0.9% in Greece, Portugal and Ireland, and by 0.3 to 0.5% in Spain, thereby helping poorer countries catch up with richer member states.
Surveys indicate that the internal market has helped more than 60% of companies that export to more than five EU countries boost their cross-border sales, and that 80% of consumers believe that the range of goods has increased, while 67% say that their quality has improved.
Because much of the recent growth has come from a doubling in oil production, it has not
increased
most household incomes, or created new employment opportunities.
Despite renewed economic growth, unemployment actually
increased
in the last four years.
But
increased
unemployment is not inevitable.
To support the increase, Brazil’s government
increased
taxes on consumption and promoted progress toward labor-market formalization.
In most cities, rents and home prices have
increased
faster than incomes, and in urban areas with robust job markets, housing stocks have failed to keep pace with demand.
And the scale of that commerce is breathtaking, with German exports to China growing from $25.9 billion a decade ago to $87.6 billion in 2011, while South Korea’s exports have
increased
from $53 billion to $133 billion during the same period of time.
The best that economists can offer is David Ricardo’s early nineteenth-century framework: if a country simply produces in accordance with its comparative advantage (in terms of resource endowments and workers’ skills), presto, it will gain through
increased
cross-border trade.
Moreover,
increased
imports would reduce China’s trade surplus and help balance China’s external position, which would be much welcomed by the international community.
For the poorest countries, much of the needed investment should come through
increased
official development assistance.
The speed of our daily life is visibly
increased
– and not for the better – by this unstoppable evolution.
With a price of around $25 per ton of carbon dioxide, and providing incentives for private sector flows,
increased
flows from carbon markets could be $30-$50 billion.
For example, although life expectancy in Europe has
increased
by nine years since the 1970s, effective retirement ages have fallen by six years, leaving only 35% of people aged 55-74 participating in the labor force.
Even with this year’s marked contraction of some central and eastern European countries’ economies, their accession to the EU boosted its overall economic growth, with the European Commission estimating that GDP in the new member states
increased
by extra 1.75 percentage points in the period 2004-2009.
For the pre-Big Bang EU-15, enlargement significantly contributed to their growth through investment opportunities and
increased
foreign demand: 7.5% of the older member states’ exports went to the newcomers in 2007, up from 4.7% in 1999.
With
increased
systemic importance often comes greater scrutiny.
It
increased
the terrorist threat by creating innocent victims, while leading to a precipitous decline in American power and influence.
Rising stock and housing markets may fuel inequality, but they also drive
increased
consumer spending.
Over the last three decades,
increased
economic and trade integration has bolstered the region’s growth.
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