Risen
in sentence
722 examples of Risen in a sentence
But rates have since
risen
again, and have now returned, in real terms, to pre-QE levels.
For example, it is frequently said that the average household income has
risen
only slightly, or not at all, for the past few decades.
Throughout the region, the murder rate has
risen
with the over-all crime rate and has approximately doubled.
So far, however, the sun hasn’t
risen.
Never mind that the Chinese renminbi has
risen
some 33% against the US dollar since mid-1995 to a level that the International Monetary Fund no longer considers undervalued, or that China’s current-account surplus has shrunk from 10% of GDP in 2007 to an estimated 2% in 2014.
Indeed, in the United States, the Dow Jones industrial average reached an all-time high in early March, having
risen
by close to 9% since September.
Over the last decade, global soft-drink sales have doubled; per capita alcohol consumption has risen; and tobacco use has increased.
While oil prices could be around $60 per barrel in November 2018, my guess is that they will have
risen
to around $80 per barrel in the meantime.
But global warming will cause damage worth possibly 1-5% of GDP by the end of the century, when the UN expects developing-world incomes to have
risen
by 1,400-1,800%.
Unit labor costs have risen, and potential output growth has fallen.
The export/GNP ratio has
risen
from 8% in 1990 to 13% in 2001, a sign that Brazil is beginning to seek out world markets.
In 2014, the number of WHO-recommended vaccines had
risen
to 11 – and the cost had reached about $21 for boys and $35 for girls.
For two consecutive years now, malaria deaths have risen, while funding has flatlined.
As a result, real interest rates have
risen
to above 10%, choking off private investment.
At the most basic level, there were not enough gold reserves around to back the monetary needs of a growing world economy, especially since the prices of goods had
risen
sharply as a result of wartime money printing.
As a result, the overall quality of investments has dropped, while leverage has
risen.
Even before the recent Middle East political shocks, oil prices had
risen
above $80-$90 a barrel, an increase driven not only by energy-thirsty emerging-market economies, but also by non-fundamental factors: a wall of liquidity chasing assets and commodities in emerging markets, owing to near-zero interest rates and quantitative easing in advanced economies; momentum and herding behavior; and limited and inelastic oil supplies.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, US President Barack Obama, and the other G-7 leaders have
risen
to the occasion and deserve strong global approbation.
But the fiscal break-even oil price for most GCC countries – in particular, Oman, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia – has
risen
in the last two years.
National debt, too, has
risen
sharply.
No tyrant has
risen
in Australia since Howard’s gun-control reforms.
Now, debt in the 28 countries for which relief has been approved has declined by an average of two-thirds, while their expenditures on health, education, and other social services have
risen
to almost four times the amount of debt-service payments.
But, as “risk-free” rates have
risen
six-fold in the past two years, the cost of bank equity and debt has often surged to levels at which investors balk.
Hong Kong, Singapore, Brazil, and China are four countries where land and real-estate prices have
risen
sharply in recent years.
In support of this claim, he refers to the “Flynn Effect” – the remarkable finding by the philosopher James Flynn that since IQ tests were first administered, scores have
risen
considerably.
It is not easy to attribute this rise to improved education, because the aspects of the tests on which scores have
risen
the most do not require a good vocabulary, or even mathematical ability, but instead assess powers of abstract reasoning.
The bigger problem for the IPCC is that global temperature has
risen
little or not at all in the last 10-20 years.
Over the past 30 years, the urban share of the Chinese population has
risen
from 20% to 46%.
Hollande is alarmed by the rapid appreciation of the euro, which has
risen
from $1.21 at the end of July 2012 to $1.36 in early February this year.
Unemployment has
risen
to a record 11.2%, with 35% of young people jobless.
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