Projections
in sentence
320 examples of Projections in a sentence
Stock prices would fall; interest rates would rise; budget surplus
projections
would be cut.
Over the same period, according to current projections, the region’s GDP will triple, from $1.8 trillion to $6.1 trillion, while trade will increase fivefold, from $881 billion to $4.7 trillion.
But current
projections
of the spread of the Ebola virus predict a million cases by January.
But its
projections
are based on assumptions so unrealistic that they seem to have come from a different planet.
This requires reasonable
projections
for domestic tax revenue and aid, as well as the right mix of foreign expertise to support the process.
Avoid overly optimistic
projections
that lead to unworkable plans and unreasonable expectations, which the government will not be able to fulfill, as happened in Guatemala, for example, when its civil war ended.
Over the last six months, growth
projections
by official institutions like the International Monetary Fund, matched or even exceeded by private forecasts, have been adjusted upward.
To anyone with decent eyesight, it was clear that the rosy budget
projections
of two years ago were nonsense.
Virtually all European Union members are expected to post higher output in 2014; but, according to the International Monetary Fund’s latest projections, the average growth rate in the eurozone will barely exceed 1%.
While vowing to use force when America’s vital interests are at stake and rejecting pessimistic
projections
of national decline, Obama has – unlike his predecessor, George W. Bush – relied more heavily on diplomacy than force.
It is also worth including the latest IMF
projections.
Indeed,
projections
from McKinsey & Company suggest that the purchasing power of this rising middle class in emerging markets may rise to $20 trillion over the next decade – twice the current level of consumption in the United States.
Worse, instead of establishing renewed economic momentum, the growth rate fell in the second quarter of 2013 and all major forecasters are now revising their
projections
of full-year growth downward.
After market-oriented reforms in the early 1990’s, growth rates soared, with
projections
of double-digit growth in the future.
So far, it has been pretty soft in Eastern Europe, endorsing programs that depend on optimistic
projections
of both future budget cuts and economic growth.
The International Monetary Fund’s latest World Economic Outlook, which offers
projections
for per capita GDP growth (among numerous other indicators) through 2021 for most of the world’s economies, facilitates the appraisal.
If the IMF
projections
are taken at face value, the median time it takes to reach the pre-crisis level of income for the 11-country group will be about nine years.
Contrary to what the administration’s budget
projections
claim, annual economic growth in the US has almost no chance of accelerating from 2% to 3%.
To get the cost
projections
down to $68 billion from a $100 billion estimate, some existing low-speed rail will be used, likely doubling the time it takes to travel from Los Angeles to San Francisco to 5-6 hours.
These
projections
have now been reduced to 2.2% at best.
As a result, while past
projections
assumed that coal use in India must rise to at least 1,500 million tons per year, it could peak at 900 million tons and then decline.
Moreover, according to OECD projections, China’s already burgeoning urban population should expand by more than 300 million by 2030 – an increment almost equal to the current population of the United States.
Given current efforts,
projections
indicate that UPE will not be achieved until 2086, if then.
This represented a nudge down from the
projections
in April, with signs of weakening perceived in the US, the eurozone, and of course the United Kingdom (grappling with the consequences of impending Brexit – the big and potentially traumatic step of leaving the European Union).
Indeed, the Panel has more often been criticized for being far too conservative in its
projections
of, for example, the likely sea-level rise in the twenty-first century.
Indeed, if we believe the IMF’s projections, the world economy’s accumulated current-account surpluses would increase by almost $1 trillion between 2009 and 2012!
One often hears about rising healthcare costs in the context of future government budget projections, with old-age health costs expected to dominate growth in government expenditures in coming years.
But a careful look at the
projections
by, say, the US Congressional Budget Office, show that the aging of our societies is only a part of the problem, and not the larger part.
According to IMF projections, of the 119 governments that are shrinking their 2013 budgets (relative to GDP), three-quarters are in developing countries (including 21 low-income and 68 middle-income countries).
Fortunately, the US has the Congressional Budget Office, which scores legislation in terms of its budgetary impact, assesses official budget proposals, and formulates its own economic
projections.
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