Projected
in sentence
567 examples of Projected in a sentence
Ireland’s
projected
budget for 2001 foresees a slight reduction in public expenditures, from 31% to 30.8% of GDP, and a simultaneous reduction of taxes by about .6% of GDP.
In other words, the
projected
increase in debt ratios could slow long-term annual growth by 0.6 percentage points in the euro zone, almost one percentage point in the US, more than one percentage point in the United Kingdom, and 1.3 percentage points in Japan.
The G-20’s role should increase further in importance, owing to emerging countries’ share of global GDP –
projected
to reach 60% in 2030 – and to the global nature of the challenges of the twenty-first century.
But as interest rates normalize and the volume of debt grows, the cost of servicing the interest on the national debt is
projected
to increase to 5.8% of GDP.
That
projected
interest cost may be much less than it would actually be if the rest of the deficit and debt forecast turns out to be correct.
By 2046, the
projected
outlays for the “mandatory” entitlement programs (Social Security and the major health programs), plus interest on the debt, would absorb more than all of the revenue that the government would collect with current tax rates.
The same reduction is
projected
for all non-defense discretionary programs, also a record-low share of GDP.
Neither of the presidential candidates has indicated either a plan or an inclination to reverse the
projected
rise in the national debt.
His prediction, which was regarded as hopelessly Pollyannaish at the time, has turned out to be correct, with the improvement likely to be at the top of his
projected
range.
Spending cuts and revenue increases that have been legislated since 2011 will reduce the
projected
deficit by $2.4 trillion over the next decade, with three-quarters coming from spending cuts, almost exclusively in non-defense discretionary programs.
I estimated the impact on GDP of America’s recent and
projected
debt increase (in which the explosive growth of public spending on pensions and health care looms largest), using four alternative estimates of the effect of debt on growth: a smaller Reinhart/Rogoff estimate from a more recent paper; a widely used International Monetary Fund study, which finds a larger impact (and which deals with the potential reverse-causality problem); a related CBO study; and a simple production function with government debt crowding out tangible capital.
Indeed, we showed that aggressive conservation actions have reduced bird extinction rates over the last few decades to about 25 E/MSY – still very high, but down sharply from the 100 E/MSY
projected
were conservation actions not in place.
In January 2001, the cumulative budget outcome for the years 2002-2011 was
projected
to be $5.6 trillion dollars in surplus.
By mid-2002, those
projected
surpluses had vanished.
By mid-2008, banks were
projected
to lose hundreds of billions of dollars.
So the market does not seem to care that countries have different potentials to generate exports to fund the financial flows needed for debt repayments, or different current and
projected
debt-to-GDP ratios.
Our Business Process Outsourcing industry is now the second largest in the world, behind India, with revenues of $8.9 billion in 2010 rising to a
projected
$11 billion in 2011.
Fillon, however, is
projected
to win the second round with 67% of the vote.
The continent’s population is
projected
to increase to 1.4 billion by 2030 and 1.9 billion by 2050, with 50% of people living in capital cities and urban conurbations.
For most of that summer, Mexico, with a
projected
fiscal deficit of around 11% of GDP, was still borrowing on international financial markets, though at an increasing premium.
Puerto Rico is not Greece; successive governors of the island have introduced budgets they thought were balanced, only to find that inadequate growth led to lower revenues and higher expenditures than had been
projected.
Annual infrastructure financing from multilateral development banks and overseas development assistance is likely to amount to no more than $40-60 billion, or 2-3% of
projected
needs.
But that initiative has not succeeded in reducing the “problem” countries’ longer-term borrowing costs to levels compatible with their
projected
growth rates: there is just too much long-term uncertainty, and growth prospects are simply too discouraging.
Another Slow Year for the Global EconomyWASHINGTON, DC – Last April, the International Monetary Fund
projected
that the world economy would grow by 3.5% in 2015.
The accelerator explanation of the shortfall in business investment in the US is consistent with evidence that, where
projected
demand growth has been relatively strong – for example, in cable, telecommunications, digital platforms, social networking, and, until recently, energy – investment growth has also been relatively strong.
This officially
projected
increase in the annual deficit would be even worse but for the fact that the cuts in personal income tax enacted last year will lapse after 2025, reducing the 2028 deficit by 1% of GDP.
Their combined
projected
addition of 2.7% of GDP to the annual deficit over the next decade is more than twice the officially
projected
rise in the ratio of the annual deficit to GDP.
Given that China is
projected
to cross the same threshold sometime this year, many believe its average annual growth over the next five years will fall well below 7%.
Increasing the retirement age by just a half-year for each of the next ten years would more than compensate for the annual decline in the labor force, which is
projected
to be 2.5 million workers during this period.
The IMF recently
projected
that virtually all global growth in 2009 will come from emerging and developing economies.
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