Increased
in sentence
3875 examples of Increased in a sentence
That is why the Education Commission calls for a financing compact between developing countries and the international community, whereby wealthier countries offer
increased
finance and guidance to developing countries that commit to educational reform and investment.
Moreover,
increased
openness to trade is associated with lower rates of infant mortality and higher life expectancy, especially in developing countries.
Over time, free trade enables workers to shift to more efficient industries, resulting in higher wages,
increased
investment in infrastructure, and a more dynamic economy.
In Munich, the number of self-employed tilers
increased
in 2004 and 2005, the first two years after the first eastern enlargement wave, from 119 to 970.
Until now, the countries of emerging Europe withstood the global financial squeeze remarkably well, coping with the slowdown in important export markets and
increased
borrowing costs.
The downside is
increased
risk for stroke and myocardial infarction.
There has been marked progress on poverty reduction, disease control, and
increased
access to schooling and infrastructure in the poorest countries of the world, especially in Africa, as a result of the MDGs.
They seem willing to surrender some social guarantees in exchange for that efficiency and
increased
personal liberty.
During her tenure, Sirleaf
increased
the participation of women in all aspects of society and aimed to ensure greater rights and protections for women and girls.
This should be
increased
to at least the 2% of GDP each NATO member has promised.
If
increased
agricultural productivity is necessary, so, too, is improved water management.
The rapid progress that is needed will require major reductions in carbon dioxide emissions, achieved through
increased
investment in the development and expansion of cleaner and more efficient energy.
In 2009, M2 money supply (a key indicator used to forecast inflation)
increased
by 27% year on year, and credit expanded by 34%.
One is the trajectory of commodity export prices, which
increased
through the late 1930s and 1940s, following the Depression-era collapse.
They likewise
increased
after the 2008-09 crisis, peaking in 2015.
Mishel calculates that productivity
increased
80.4% from 1948 to 2011, while median real wages rose only 39% – almost none of the wage growth occurred during the last four decades.
From 1979 to 2012, the real median wage
increased
by only 5%.
Consumer inflation
increased
fairly steadily (albeit with major short-run swings), until the oil crises of 1973-4 and 1979-81 propelled it to historic highs in Europe, North America, Japan and other countries.
And when natural forest habitat is cleared, the hardened soils left behind allow pooled water to breed mosquitoes that have
increased
the number of worldwide deaths from malaria.
But there is no denying that these countries have been victims of advanced economies’ monetary policies, which have
increased
capital-flow volatility over the last three decades.
According to the International Monetary Fund’s April 2011 World Economic Outlook, though the volatility of capital flows has
increased
worldwide, it is higher in emerging market economies than in advanced economies.
The Iraq War, in particular,
increased
public awareness of the mistakes in Bush’s first term, but other issues are changing as well.
And in Fiji, no-take zones and better management of marine areas has
increased
species like mangrove lobsters by 250% per year.
Both US investment and US exports
increased
by about 10% last year alone.
To be sure, income inequality in the United States has
increased
tremendously over the last 20 years.
Until 2006, the number of manufacturing jobs decreased while construction jobs
increased.
Through irrigation, fertilizer, pesticides, and plant breeding, the Green Revolution
increased
world grain production by an astonishing 250% between 1950 and 1984, raising the calorie intake of the world’s poorest people and averting severe famines.
First proposed in the Baruch Plan of 1945, versions of it have surfaced ever since as the number of nuclear weapons states
increased.
Another new dimension of the energy security problem is the manner in which high prices and
increased
reserves have transferred power to energy producing countries.
HFO has been the “king of marine fuels” since the 1960s, but only in recent years has it come under
increased
scrutiny.
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