Trillion
in sentence
2031 examples of Trillion in a sentence
The cost could be a staggering $10
trillion.
Research from the McKinsey Global Institute shows that, thanks to global flows of goods, services, finance, data, and people, world GDP is more than 10% higher – some $7.8
trillion
in 2014 alone – than it would have been had economies remained closed.
In early April, the BOJ announced plans to unleash the most aggressive bond-buying program of all, promising to inject $1.4
trillion
into the economy over the next two years in order to meet an inflation target of 2%.
Some of the most egregious examples included Obama’s claims that Romney was planning to raise taxes by $2,000 on middle-income taxpayers and/or cut taxes by $5 trillion, and that Romney backed a law that would outlaw “all abortions, even in cases of rape and incest.”
It would comprise 620 million consumers, and have a combined GDP of more than $22
trillion
(larger than the EU’s, and more than double that of China).
Even if we project a relatively rapid economic recovery, by the time this lesser depression is over, the US will have experienced an investment shortfall of at least $4
trillion.
With roughly $2
trillion
in foreign-exchange reserves, the Chinese do have deep pockets to fund massive increases in government spending, and to help backstop bank loans.
In particular, China has followed a strategy in the past decade or so that entails running large current-account surpluses and building up foreign-exchange reserves, which are now reported to be in excess of $3
trillion.
CAMBRIDGE – Ever since Donald Trump won the US presidential election, the press and financial markets have focused on his proposal to cut taxes and to spend $1
trillion
on infrastructure over the next decade.
The total foreign debt of US residents (most of which is in US dollars) is above $7
trillion.
By 2019, total military spending is projected to be $8.2 trillion, exceeding by $2
trillion
the budgeted outlays for all non-mandatory budget spending.
According to the Swedish International Peace Research Institute, total military spending in constant 2005 dollars reached roughly $1.4
trillion
in 2007.
The catalyst for exchange-rate appreciation would be not only higher US interest rates, but also a dollar squeeze in emerging markets, where foreign debts have increased by $3
trillion
since 2010.
The annual US budget deficit reached 5% of GNP, with an enormous part of the gap financed each year by Asian central banks, which now hold about $2
trillion
in claims against America.
In December 2011 and February 2012, the European Central Bank announced the long-term refinancing operation (LTRO), whereby European banks were lent around €1
trillion
($1.3 trillion) in two tranches.
When the $200 billion rescue of these firms was undertaken and their $6
trillion
in liabilities taken over by the US government, the rally lasted one day.
Because most foreign assets held by US investors are denominated in a foreign currency, the value of those assets could be reduced by several
trillion
dollars, in total.
The capital account is less open, foreign-currency reserves of $2.5
trillion
mean that the exchange rate is controllable, and, with savings exceeding investment (the current-account surplus is declining but still positive), China is not dependent on foreign capital.
When the crisis spread to Portugal and Spain, there was the $1
trillion
rescue.
The US deficit for 2010 is roughly $1.3
trillion.
The world's richest individuals, 225 of them, have the combined wealth of over $1
trillion
and of the 4.4 billion people in developing countries 3/5 lack access to safe sewers, 1/3 have no access to clean water, and 1/5 have no access to medical services.
Second, the CBO estimates that the law will add $1.45
trillion
to the deficit over the next decade, which could trigger spending cuts to health-insurance programs for the elderly, poor, and disabled, such as Medicare and Medicaid.
These programs are already some of the government’s largest budget items, accounting for $1
trillion
in spending – 26% of the federal budget – in 2016.
Malnutrition costs an estimated $3.5
trillion
every year to the global economy, owing to loss of productivity and higher health-care costs.
It is hard to imagine that China’s government, which obsesses over every minute issue of diplomatic protocol, had not orchestrated this stark image of America’s decline relative to the country to which it owes $1.4
trillion.
Over a
trillion
barrels of reserves have been proven, and more are likely to be found.
The world would be $11
trillion
richer each year by 2030, with $7
trillion
going to developing countries – equivalent to an extra $1,000 for every person every year in these countries by 2030.
But it also shows that 80% of the benefits stand – and 80% of $11
trillion
is still a whopping $9
trillion
in benefits to humanity – on top of a reduction in lower poverty, child mortality, and pollution, higher life expectancy, and less gender- and race-based discrimination.
In order to make the SDR the principal reserve asset via the allocation route, close to $3
trillion
in SDRs would need to be created, an unrealistic proposition.
Far from devaluing the renminbi, the People’s Bank of China has spent $1
trillion
of its reserves over the last three years trying to support it (by far the largest such intervention in history).
Back
Next
Related words
Global
Would
Billion
Which
Dollars
Years
About
Could
Economy
Total
Reserves
World
Assets
Annual
Investment
According
Countries
Roughly
Their
Financial