Increases
in sentence
1841 examples of Increases in a sentence
When he saves the building Café du Nord and her owner from sinking in the sea, his popularity
increases
and nobody but the governor and politicians of the council wants his death.
It is up to the captain to find the killer before the body count
increases.
By the time of this eighth episode, the two young brothers evolved into convincing & heroic crime battlers, the suspense
increases
every week, the scripts refer more and more to older horror classics and the stories provide new and creative types of supernatural menace every time!
The canned food only
increases
the cats' appetites for human flesh, and they quickly turn to their loving owners for more.
May be in this way the excitement
increases
and you will be more anxious to know the end of the film.
It seems as though as the popularity of Japanese (and other Asian) horror films increases, more and more of these barrel-scrapers are appearing in my local video emporium.
Granted, there are some very weak sections, e.g. the Matthau, but I laughed even as this absurd chapter came to a close...it's a product of an era when not only sex, but laughter and freedom, were celebrated and must be seen in that mindset...this is a movie that people who write certain modern movie guidebooks will never, ever, ever understand...for the simple reason that, in this era, as prurience increases, thus does narrowmindedness, so that we come to forget completely the now remote atmosphere in which such a film could be made.
Basically, in Hell's Kitchen, New York, after being blinded by a toxic waste chemical, which
increases
his other senses dramatically, young Matt Murdock (Scott Terra) loses his father Jack (David Keith) to an unknown man dropping a rose.
Monetary tightening was not the only major policy error of the 1930’s; so was a retreat into protectionism, symbolized by the Smoot-Hawley tariff
increases
at the beginning of that decade.
So the number of “new” customers attracted by cheap prices increases, and the number of loyal customers decreases as shoppers prefer by become “new” again for whomever offers the best deal.
Each year of additional schooling
increases
a learner’s earnings by 10%, on average, improving their long-term financial stability, and helping to lower the risk of a return to violence.
As the international economist Dani Rodrik argues, globalization
increases
demands on the state to provide social insurance while reducing its ability to do so.
In the wake of sharp price
increases
in the 1970s, central banks wanted to commit credibly to monetary discipline in order to facilitate disinflation.
These economies are more frequently subject to adverse terms-of-trade shocks, such as
increases
in world oil prices or declines in prices for their commodity exports.
The US “pivot” to Asia further
increases
the pressure on Europe to deal with its own neighborhood.
Instead, cities like New York and London have experienced sharp
increases
in population since 1990, after decades of decline.
Trump’s deficit-busting tax cuts and
increases
in government spending make no sense for an economy nearing a business-cycle peak and with an unemployment rate of 3.8%.
Now, the largest banks are claiming significant
increases
in non-performing property loans, while the glut of new industrial capacity implies that some firms may not have adequate profits to service their debts.
If negotiations remain deadlocked, and proliferation
increases
in the region, the country might well pursue this course.
Even without widening the fiscal deficit, such “balanced budget”
increases
in taxes and spending would lower unemployment and increase output.
However, rigorous standardization of the environment, particularly if it leads to barren surroundings,
increases
the risk of obtaining results that, being specific to a narrow set of conditions, cannot be compared with other researchers’ results.
Deforestation also leads to reduced absorption of rainfall, which
increases
the volume of standing water.
Central banks frequently stress the limits of their powers, and bemoan lack of government progress toward “structural reform” – a catch-all phrase covering trade liberalization, labor- and product-market reforms, and measures to address medium-term fiscal challenges, such as pension age
increases.
The government must avoid relying too much on proposals for tax increases, which ultimately feed back on growth and sustainability.
It would be far preferable to balance tax
increases
with some reversal of runaway government spending.
State insurance regulators resist rate increases, but they are ultimately powerless, because insurers can simply take their business elsewhere.
That way, the debt/GDP ratio declines because the denominator (economic output) increases, not because the numerator (the total the government has borrowed) declines.
People also believe that tax
increases
cannot realistically be purely temporary expedients in an economic crisis, and that they must be regarded as an opening wedge that should be avoided at all costs.
History shows, however, that tax increases, if expressly designated as temporary, are indeed reversed later.
Italians are in the habit of thinking that tax
increases
necessarily go only to paying off rich investors, rather than to paying for government services like better roads and schools.
Back
Next
Related words
Spending
Which
Growth
Their
Would
Countries
Price
Economic
Productivity
Rates
Government
Prices
Other
Public
While
There
Income
Higher
Years
Fiscal