Similarly
in sentence
2170 examples of Similarly in a sentence
Similarly, multilateral development banks are investing just 1% of their total spending on ICT projects, and only about 4% of this limited investment is being spent on policy development, work that is critical if digital economies are to be well regulated.
Similarly, Dwight Perkins and Tom Rawski found that from 1978 to 2005, China’s GDP grew by 9.5%, while capital investment grew by 9.6%, contributing 44.7% to GDP.
But if we pursue business as usual, the odds of making
similarly
impressive progress over the next 50 years are not very promising.
Similarly, kites get tangled in trees, and if you climb the tree to free it, you might look over your neighbor's wall and see a woman without her veil, which would put you in sin.
Similarly, Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of England, envisages a Britain with a Cyprus-sized financial sector amounting to 900% of GDP.
Similarly, central bank independence may be a great idea when monetary instability is the binding constraint, but it will backfire where the real challenge is poor competitiveness.
Similarly, the quantitative easing (QE) that has defined many major central banks’ monetary policy in recent years does not involve buying or selling foreign assets.
These calculations indicate that a Blueprints world with CO2 capture and storage results in the least amount of climate change, provided emissions of other major manmade greenhouse gases are
similarly
reduced.
Similarly, Article 19 of the Law on the Bank of England permits the Treasury to direct the Bank’s monetary policy, if it is “satisfied that the directions are required in the public interest and by extreme economic circumstances.”
Similarly, in 2011, Spanish banks increased their lending to the government by almost 15%, even though private-sector lending contracted and the Spanish government became less creditworthy.
In Europe, the new technology could
similarly
break Russia’s politically troublesome stranglehold on natural-gas supplies.
Similarly, Milton Friedman's panegyrics to pure capitalism seemed curiously out of place during the heyday of the social democratic age, the 1960's.
Those who led the British campaign to leave the European Union – such as Conservatives like Boris Johnson (now the country’s foreign secretary) and Nigel Farage, the right-wing populist leader of the UK Independence Party – are
similarly
disparaged for recklessly jeopardizing the future of the UK and the EU alike.
Similarly, the net export deficit – the broadest measure of a country’s trade imbalance – has been 4% of GDP since 2000, versus an average of 1.1% over the final three decades of the twentieth century.
Similarly, India has a gender ratio at birth of around 110 boys for every 100 girls, with large regional variations.
Similarly, the American political drama “House of Cards” reflects a kind of disillusionment – this time, with US politics.
Similarly, environmentalists boast that households in the United Kingdom have reduced their electricity consumption by almost 10% since 2005.
Similarly, its average projection of the federal funds rate for 2015 was 1.5%.
Russia’s scheme to rehabilitate the rail line from its territory into the secessionist Georgian province of Abkhazia
similarly
mixes economics with neo-imperial aspirations.
But their horizon of reform is
similarly
confined to the banking sector, and they rarely ask what caused the banks to behave so badly.
Similarly, the World Bank has shown that a 10% increase in broadband penetration increased GDP growth by 1.4% in low- to medium-income countries.
Similarly, Rwanda’s tuberculosis program has become a model for Africa, and all Rwandan families now have access to insecticide-treated bed nets to prevent malaria, contributing to an 87% drop in cases during the last seven years.
Canada, that politest of countries, is
similarly
unwilling to be bullied; it has retaliated with 25% tariffs on $12 billion of US goods.
Similarly, US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer would prefer bare-knuckle negotiations to disruption, though he is already in a spat with Ross.
Putin behaves similarly, using the press to emphasize, say, how Russia’s annexation of Crimea has reminded the country’s Western opponents of its “greatness.”
Similarly, in 2003, an international criminal tribunal indicted Liberia’s then president, Charles Taylor.
Similarly, eradication of malaria in Spain, Italy, and Greece in the late 1940s (using household spraying of pesticides among other factors) helped bring a boom in tourism and foreign investment to these countries in the 1950s and 1960s.
Similarly, Americans keep two million of their fellow citizens in jail: the cost of building the prisons and paying the jailers is also included in GDP.
Similarly, despite high levels of political violence, Nigeria produces more than 1,000 films annually.
Similarly, in the case of Greece, the collapse in business confidence happened under my watch.
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