Trillion
in sentence
2031 examples of Trillion in a sentence
By 2014 an estimated $2.6
trillion
in manufactured goods around the world (or 15% of total global output) will use this technology, building on the research of scientists in some 100 nations around the world.
For banks that have filings with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, the sum stands at an astounding $2.2
trillion.
Extrapolating over the coming decade, the numbers would approach $5 trillion, an amount vastly larger than what both President Barack Obama’s administration and his Republican opponents seem willing to cut from further government deficits.
That $5
trillion
dollars is not money invested in building roads, schools, and other long-term projects, but is directly transferred from the American economy to the personal accounts of bank executives and employees.
In order to rescue the banking system, the Federal Reserve, for example, put interest rates at artificially low levels; as was disclosed recently, it also has provided secret loans of $1.2
trillion
to banks.
If emissions were appropriately restricted, the value of emission rights would be a couple
trillion
dollars a year – no wonder that there is a squabble over who should get them.
To the extent that the
trillion
or more dollars of unfunded war costs contributed to the budget deficit that plagues the US today, Bin Laden was able to damage American hard power.
Furthermore, they could cancel plans to modernize the land-based component of the US nuclear triad, which is projected to cost at least $1.24
trillion
over 30 years while failing to improve national security.
In all, around $2
trillion
a year will be needed for the next 20 years to keep the world’s cities liveable and to reduce their carbon emissions.
Islamic Finance UnboundWASHINGTON, DC – While uncertainty continues to roil global markets, driving many investors into full retreat, one part of the financial sector is expanding exponentially: Islamic-law-compliant financial assets have grown from about $5 billion in the late 1980’s to roughly $1.2
trillion
in 2011.
For almost $20 trillion, temperatures by the end of the century will have been reduced by a negligible 0.05ºC.”
Global GDP, which currently stands at about $60 trillion, will at least triple in the next 30 years.
Indeed, despite perpetual talk of an overheating economy, China’s exports and retail sales are soaring, and its foreign-exchange reserves now approach $2.5 trillion, even as America’s fiscal and trade deficits remain alarming.
Of course, the mother of all bailouts is the absurd blank check the United States government is granting the giant home mortgage lending agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which hold or guarantee $5
trillion
in mortgages that are looking increasingly dubious.
Meanwhile, it can use its $2
trillion
of reserves as a cushion when the US and global economy sag.
Indeed, insofar as the impact of these policies on the recovery can be reliably measured, it is probably modest – definitely not worth the €2.3
trillion
($2.8 trillion) in assets purchased since April 2015, not to mention the other consequences of maintaining zero or negative interest rates.
A 2015 report by the McKinsey Global Institute found that if women and men played an “identical role in labor markets,” $28
trillion
would be added to the global economy by 2025.
In Europe’s peripheral economies, ten-year yields are edging closer to 1%, as the European Central Bank pursues a €1.1
trillion
($1.3 trillion) quantitative-easing program.
Indeed, so-called “repo” activity – that is, the sale of a US Treasury obligation that the seller promises to buy back later at a slightly higher price – has declined considerably, with the balance of such transactions having fallen from $5
trillion
before the crisis to $2.5
trillion
today.
Top executives from institutions representing more than $30
trillion
in investable assets – one-third of the world’s total – will be in attendance.
And China has incurred substantial costs: the PBOC’s efforts to keep the value of the renminbi relatively stable against the dollar has contributed to a nearly $900 billion decline in China’s foreign-exchange reserves from its June 2014 peak of about $4
trillion.
In October 2008, a month after the Lehman collapse, the G-8 countries agreed to rescue all systemically relevant banks, while rescue facilities to the tune of €4.9
trillion
($6.7 trillion) were established worldwide – and are still largely intact today.
Indeed, notwithstanding an unprecedented post-crisis tripling of Fed assets to roughly $3
trillion
– probably on their way to $4
trillion
over the next year – US consumers have pulled back as never before.
Despite a doubling of its balance sheet, to a little more than €3
trillion
($4 trillion), Europe has slipped back into recession for the second time in four years.
With total estimated federal government spending for 2017 of around $4 trillion, that amounts to about $1 for every $2,000 that the government is likely to spend.
They have accumulated vast foreign exchange reserves, estimated at more than $2
trillion.
China’s New Growth OrderHONG KONG – Between 1978 and 2012, China’s GDP grew at an average annual rate of about 10% – from $341 billion to $8.3
trillion
(at 2012 prices) – lifting more than 500 million Chinese out of poverty in the process.
Economic models indicate that a successful Doha round would make the global economy $11
trillion
richer each year by 2030, with most of the benefits going to developing countries.
Thus, the $60 price decline since last August will redistribute more than $2
trillion
annually to oil consumers, providing a bigger income boost than the combined US and Chinese fiscal stimulus in 2009.
Had all European banks and economies not been imperiled, it is hard to imagine that European leaders ever would have agreed to a $1
trillion
backstop for financial markets.
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