Risen
in sentence
722 examples of Risen in a sentence
Since then, interest in EU competitiveness has
risen
further, spurred in particular by the challenge posed by countries like China.
Here is one measure of success: over the past year and a half, the proportion of people who smile at you in Port Phillip has risen, from 8% to 10%.
US exports to Central America have
risen
by 94% over the past six years; imports from the region have
risen
by 87%.
Having
risen
to the top, he feels no sense of entitlement.
The CPPC has
risen
to the challenge and provided a worthwhile service, by bringing past consumer-protection violations and noncompliance issues to health-insurance regulators who are willing to listen.
Under the FFP, workers who were paid $0.50 cents per 32-pound bucket (a rate that has not
risen
in more than 30 years) receive $0.82 – a 64% increase.
The interest rate on ten-year Treasury bonds has
risen
almost a full percentage point since February, to 2.72%, implying a loss of nearly 10% in the price of the bond.
By the end of 2000, oil prices had
risen
to levels not seen since the beginning of the 1990’s.
But, as corporate profitability has
risen
across the board, investment trends everywhere (with the exception of China and India) have been weak, which was true even before the 2008 global financial crisis.
As the ILO’s report shows, while wages have climbed gradually across almost the entire income distribution in most countries, they have
risen
sharply for the top 10%, and even more for the top 1% of employees.
Twenty years later, the structure of banking regulation in Europe has
risen
to the top of the political agenda in London.
Europe’s bank-market ratio was 3.2 in 1990; by 2011, it had
risen
to 3.8.
The dollar’s value has
risen
particularly high in the last few months, as Trump’s promises to increase government spending, lower business taxes, and cut regulation have inspired a flight to quality by investors.
Yet, by 2007, China’s household savings rate had
risen
to a staggering 30%, compared to just 2.5% in the US.
Thanks to the shale-energy revolution, American oil production has
risen
from five million barrels per day in 2008 to 9.3 million barrels in 2015, a supply boom that has so far persisted, despite the price collapse.
Moreover, the share of estates dedicated to charitable bequests has
risen
over time, particularly among the wealthiest group.
Those investments yielded good returns: despite staggering global population growth, from 2.5 billion in 1945 to seven billion today, food availability per person has
risen
by more than 40%.
Over the last two decades, annual GDP growth has averaged just 0.46%, and government debt has
risen
steadily, totaling more than 130% of GDP today.
It is neither here nor there to claim that “had the UK not used a labyrinth of rules and regulations to hold nominal interest rates on debt below inflation, its debt-to-GDP ratio might have
risen
over the period 1945-1955 instead of falling dramatically.”
And, indeed, imports have
risen
sharply as well, as the rupee’s appreciation lowers the relative price of foreign goods: in the first half of this year, nominal merchandise imports grew by 28%.
Since 2008, banking-sector credit growth in China has been among the fastest in the world, far outpacing GDP growth, and China’s total debt has
risen
from 130% of GDP to 220% of GDP.
Some big banks have struggled, but others have
risen
to take their place.
Rapidly, visibly, and inevitably, China has
risen.
The price of medicines has become increasingly important as the cost of developing new medicines such as biopharmaceuticals has
risen.
Sovereign interest-rate spreads have been well-behaved, the euro has strengthened, and equity markets have
risen
robustly.
In 1997, other EU states accounted for 30% of inward foreign direct investment: by 2012, the EU’s share had
risen
to 50%.
Economic-growth rates in other systemically large countries, including Turkey and Mexico, have
risen
as well, despite European and US headwinds.
Yet, since the peak in commodity prices and global capital flows around 2011, the incidence of sovereign defaults worldwide has
risen
only modestly.
In Brazil, for example, the share of women in the workforce has
risen
sharply over the past 20 years, from about 45% to almost 60%, owing in part to family-friendly policies.
Now that Syria’s Sunnis have
risen
up against their Alawite rulers, Christians’ loyalty to the regime has become a liability, even a danger.
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