Trillion
in sentence
2031 examples of Trillion in a sentence
And, at $2.3 trillion, the EU’s share of global services exports is the world’s largest by far.
Studies like one by the World Health Organization's Commission on Macroeconomics and Health show that with an $11
trillion
dollar annual national income, America could finance the control of AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and many other killer diseases for a small fraction of the money it wastes in Iraq.
China, Hong Kong, India, Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan together have another $1.1
trillion
or so in reported foreign exchange reserves.
The amounts held in reserves are huge - roughly $1.6
trillion
worldwide.
Relative to global income - some $40
trillion
- the magnitude of monetary growth would be minuscule.
That number is expected to reach $1.4
trillion
by 2020, and the continent’s population is expected to exceed two billion by 2050.
If we could only find the political will, establishing free trade could be achieved at a very low cost, with benefits of up to $2.4
trillion
a year.
Every cell in your body (except mature red blood cells) – there are about 50
trillion
in an adult – contains copies of your DNA, which are coiled up tightly to form 46 separate bundles called chromosomes.
The PBOC spent a record-setting $1
trillion
trying to stop the renminbi’s slide after 2014.
Today, women undertake three-quarters of all unpaid care work, producing output of around $10 trillion, or 13% of global GDP – none of which is translated into income, let alone economic power.
The McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) has estimated that advancing gender equality could add $12
trillion
per year to the world economy by 2025.
In the Asia-Pacific region alone, getting more women into full-time employment in higher-paid, higher-productivity sectors could add $4.5
trillion
per year to GDP, 12% above the current trajectory.
Indeed, the remarkable unanimity that prevailed in the first phase of the financial crisis that began in 2008, and which culminated in the $1
trillion
rescue package put together for the London G-20 meeting in April 2009, dissipated long ago.
For example, European banks hold more than a €1
trillion
($1.3 trillion) of Spanish debt, with German and French banks holding more than half of that sum.
(What are the Chinese planning to do with all their ever-growing $1.4
trillion
in reserves?
Based on this information, we can estimate the aggregated future cost of eradicating poverty at about $1.5
trillion.
If we set aside the money now in a fund (which would accrue interest over the next 45 years), we would need a little less than $1
trillion
to eradicate human poverty forever.
A
trillion
dollars sounds like a huge deal.
The US is running an annual budget deficit of around $1 trillion, which may widen further as a result of the new tax agreement.
African agricultural output is forecast to reach $1
trillion
by 2030.
For example, in the US, energy efficiency measures alone can save over a
trillion
dollars, while driving job creation and growth in the short-term, aiding the economic recovery and providing the economic stimulus required to accelerate investment in low-carbon energy generation and use.
The Review on AMR estimates that, at that point, some ten million lives could be lost each year, at a cumulative cost to global economic output of $100
trillion.
To put that into perspective, world GDP today totals $74
trillion
per year.
In 1918, the crisis response to the flu pandemic cost some $17.5
trillion.
In 2007, global assets (including stock, private and public debt, and bank deposits) amounted to $194
trillion
– 343% of annual global GDP.
Although the Fed expanded its balance sheet from less than $1
trillion
in late 2008 to $4.5
trillion
by the fall of 2014, nominal GDP increased by only $2.7
trillion.
China’s cities are forecast to spend around $5.3
trillion
on infrastructure over the next 15 years; but denser, more efficient cities would save around $1.4
trillion
(15% of 2013 GDP) of these costs.
Since the start of the financial crisis, the Fed, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, and the Bank of Japan have used QE to inject more than $4
trillion
of additional liquidity into their economies.
Research by the McKinsey Global Institute suggests that lower interest rates saved the US and European governments nearly $1.6
trillion
from 2007 to 2012.
Moreover, according to iResearch, mobile payments in China already amount to $5.5 trillion, roughly 50 times that of the US.
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