Risen
in sentence
722 examples of Risen in a sentence
Most of these young entrepreneurs have
risen
within the “knowledge economy.”
But property prices have
risen
faster than wages and profits in manufacturing, causing the return on capital for a select few real-estate owners to grow faster than China’s GDP.
In fact, while the rise of China and other emerging economies has reduced inequality among countries, domestic inequality has
risen
almost everywhere.
Given property’s role as the main form of collateral for bank loans, financial risk has
risen
sharply.
These problems have
risen
to the top of the political agenda in the United States, but they are not uniquely American problems.
Jokowi has
risen
from humble beginnings to the apex of power without compromising his image as a “man of the people” or his reputation for pragmatism and honesty.
According to public-opinion polls, the center-left Democratic Party, led by Pier Luigi Bersani, along with some more left-leaning allies, has the support of roughly 33% of the electorate, down since late January, while backing for Berlusconi’s center-right coalition has
risen
to 28%.
Growth prospects have been steadily downgraded; public debt/GDP ratios have
risen
dramatically, despite – or, some might argue, because of – unrelenting fiscal austerity; household debt burdens are not falling; and Italy’s vicious circle of rising debt and falling prices will soon be the fate of other stressed eurozone economies.
Stock prices have climbed, led by financials and industrials; interest rates on US government bonds have risen, both on a standalone basis and relative to those in other advanced economies; and the dollar has surged to levels not seen since 2003.
Certainly the People’s Bank of China, which engineered a credit squeeze in June in an attempt to discourage loan growth, seems to believe that financial leverage has
risen
to dangerous levels.
As the sun set in the west, a huge and perfect orange ball burning into the earth, the moon had
risen
in the east, as perfectly full and round as the sun, cool and bluish white.
Asia’s New Growth ModelMILAN – Led by Asia, the share of the global economy held by emerging markets has
risen
steadily over recent decades.
Such countercyclical capital requirements are likely to be added to the toolkit of macroprudential rules and policies, the use of which has
risen
as enthusiasm for light-touch financial supervision has faded.
But look at the last row: “Real” national income seems to have rebounded dramatically in Year 3, having
risen
by a healthy 4.28%!
This is what was happening in Greece in 2014, when R had
risen
by 0.8% but P had fallen by 2.6%.
Re-stating those commitments in real terms, total aid should have
risen
by around $60 billion, and aid to Africa should have
risen
by around $30 billion.
Second, the relative weight and importance of developing nations in the global economy will have
risen
even more.
In the Middle East, Putin sees genuine threats to the Russian state’s survival from the Islamist parties that have
risen
to power in predominantly Sunni Muslim countries in the wake of the Arab Spring revolutions.
Moreover, real wages have barely risen; for more than 60% of German workers, they have actually fallen.
Wages have
risen
substantially more elsewhere in Europe, despite the depth of the economic crisis.
Instead, these respectable supporters have gradually been replaced over the years by a shady new class of rich Japanese, who have
risen
through loan-sharking and other dubious businesses.
The New MonopolistsSTANFORD – For more than 30 years in advanced economies, particularly the United States, wealth and income inequality have increased, real (inflation-adjusted) wages have
risen
slowly, and retirees have faced declining interest rates on savings.
This has occurred while corporate profits and stock prices have
risen
sharply.
By 2015, that share had
risen
to about 80%, meaning that most capital held by public corporations today is owned and traded by bondholders.
But since 1984, the share of monopoly profits has
risen
steadily; it reached 23% of total income produced by American corporations in 2015.
And, because the violence tends to come in dribs and drabs – rarely since 2004 has any one day’s casualties reached double figures – the South has never
risen
back up the news agenda.
While the dollar has
risen
recently against the euro, Europeans did not influence this.
But unemployment has
risen
even faster and further than expected.
Global average life expectancy, for example, has
risen
from 31 to almost 73 years in just two centuries.
Electricity prices, for instance, have doubled, while fuel for cars has
risen
64%.
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