Parity
in sentence
297 examples of Parity in a sentence
It's based on purchasing power
parity.
It's addition modulo 2, just like in the
parity
bit check on your computer.
Or parity, the choice to come together.
However, even as we approach cost parity, the majority of those who own solar earn much more than the average American.
There are more than two possible values, but what does have two possible values is that number's parity, that is whether it's odd or even.
The first prisoner has a 50% chance of giving a wrong answer about his own hat, but the
parity
information he conveys allows everyone else to guess theirs with absolute certainty.
And everytime this happens, the next person in line will switch the
parity
they expect to see.
Now, the business community has certainly noticed this, because it's crossing the grid
parity
point.
Grid
parity
is understood as that line, that threshold, below which renewable electricity is cheaper than electricity from burning fossil fuels.
Some people are using the phrase "The Solar Singularity" now, meaning when it gets below the grid parity, unsubsidized in most places, then it's the default choice.
I presented a couple of gender
parity
indices, and some conclusions about the Arab world.
If we were to do this for three contiguous years, we would be at gender
parity
for the first time in over a half of a century.
That means they all change parity, or evenness and oddness, at the same time.
Whichever color you choose will always be the opposite
parity
of the other two piles: odd when they’re even and even when they’re odd, since every egg fusion flips each pile’s
parity
simultaneously.
That means we want the blue egg pile to be the opposite
parity
of the other two piles at the start as well.
And New Zealand is steadily marching towards their goal of recruit gender
parity
by 2021.
Well, we have now the fifth-largest economy in the world in purchasing power
parity
terms.
It may be difficult for China to ever match the success of a small Asian country like Singapore, which has already overtaken the US in terms of GDP per capita as measured by purchasing power
parity.
But Japan would close the 30% gap (adjusted for purchasing power parity) between its per capita GDP and that of the US.
As market reforms have brought substantial prosperity (average annual per capita GDP, at purchasing power parity, is now $17,000), a large middle class, based mostly in small and medium-size companies and the service sector, developed beyond the reach of the state-owned behemoths.
Or it could also mean that economists’ baseline model of the international economy – especially the assumption of “uncovered interest parity,” which holds that foreign interest income expressed in the domestic currency should equal the domestic interest rate – is simply wrong.
In many countries, both developed and developing, men and women are at or near
parity
when it comes to education and health, according to the report, which covers 142 countries and 94% of the world’s population.
Businesses can commit to gender
parity
by taking several concrete steps.
The WEF’s findings show that the Middle East and North Africa suffer from the widest gender gap, with women reaching only 40% of
parity
in the workplace, on average, compared with nearly 80% in North America.
It would be difficult to identify more compelling reasons to accelerate progress toward gender
parity.
And, indeed, the evidence suggests that China was larger (in terms of purchasing power parity) than any other economy in the world until around 1889, when the US eclipsed it.
Moreover, given that organizations with more women in management achieve a 35% higher return on equity and 34% better total return to shareholders than their counterparts, greater gender
parity
would be a boon for the sector.
The only successful instance of such an arrangement is the Bretton Woods conference in 1944, but even then the exchange rates that were fixed there proved unrealistic, and a major wave of
parity
alterations was soon needed (as well as the maintenance of exchange controls).
Europe also became nervous after the euro exchange rate rose to more than $1.40, far beyond the purchasing power
parity
(PPP) rate of $1.17.
On this International Women’s Day, we must not forget that in the world’s poorest communities, poverty, hunger, domestic violence, and discrimination remain endemic obstacles to gender
parity.
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