Richer
in sentence
568 examples of Richer in a sentence
The
richer
it is, the more sharply its target should cut emissions relative to the baseline.
But this may change as the source countries become
richer
and undergo rapid declines in birth rates.
Consider this simple fact: Tripling mobile Internet access over the next 15 years could make the developing world $22 trillion
richer.
That boom enabled Southern Europe to begin to narrow the large gap in income with the
richer
countries of Northern Europe.
Indeed, the United States today is 9%
richer
than we would have dared forecast a decade ago, and that is true despite labor-market slack and thus the largest production shortfalls below potential output in two decades.
Although wealth has been growing constantly – GDP has more than doubled in the last 50 years – the share of wages in the total has diminished by 10%, even while millions of the rich have become much
richer.
Making the rich poorer will not make the poor
richer.
But, over the years, economics has become richer, too.
If these people are
richer
than people today (and therefore using more energy per person), total emissions worldwide could double or even triple.
But, having become much
richer
over the past three decades, China is now proposing to the world its own model of development – and, indeed, of civilization.
However, by 2100, even the most pessimistic forecasts from the UN expect the average person in the developing countries to be
richer
than now, and thus better able to cope.
So Kyoto is basically a costly way of doing little for much
richer
people far in the future.
With developing countries getting
richer
over the century, malaria is similarly likely to decrease rather than increase.
The goal is not to prevent developing countries’ growth-related emissions, but to slow their rise and eventually reverse them as these countries become
richer.
As countries become richer, non-traded services constitute a greater share of output, causing GDP to grow faster than trade, while global overcapacity has restrained trade growth further.
So today’s emerging-market economies should be
richer
than today’s advanced economies were back then, right?
Yet, contrary to this theory, there has been no overall tendency for the poorest countries to catch up , or converge, with the
richer
ones in recent decades.
The difference does not lie in how wealthy each country was: Argentina was much
richer
than all of the other economies mentioned, except for South Korea.
European leaders hoped that a monetary union would help Europe’s less competitive economies catch up to the
richer
countries of the north.
Yet, along with “good” asset-price inflation, aimed at making people feel
richer
and spend more, these approaches have delivered “bad” inflation, owing to surging commodity prices, which impose a tax on both inputs and consumers.
Just as augmented-reality technologies make our experience of the world
richer
(imagine a sports match today without instant replay), putting the development experience of the world at the fingertips of those engaged in promoting development is now perfectly feasible.
Labor mobility from poorer to
richer
areas provides a shock absorber against differential economic hardship.
Most of the investments are aimed at producing food or other crops for export from the countries in which the land is acquired, for the obvious reason that
richer
countries can pay more for the output.
People in the industrialized countries are already an estimated 74 times
richer
per capita than those in the poorest countries.
Read More from "Germany versus the Euro?"Plugging the Leaks in Africa’s EconomiesDAKAR – Africa is usually perceived as a net beneficiary of the global financial system, with aid and investment flowing to the continent from
richer
parts of the world.
Yet wages are vastly different and hence we expect lower retail prices in poorer cities and countries than in
richer
ones.
Then, feeling
richer
and brimming with optimism, the private sector goes on a spending spree and the economy booms.
What is emerging is not an alternative paradigm, but rather an expanded, richer, and more flexible version of inflation targeting.
For example, many pension systems transfer money from the poor to the middle class, simply because
richer
people usually live longer.
A massive increase in European Commission spending power to achieve greater pan-European social cohesion would be politically unacceptable to the
richer
members, who would have to pay for it.
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