Trillion
in sentence
2031 examples of Trillion in a sentence
This finding was based on a groundbreaking research paper that showed that even a highly efficient global CO2 tax aimed at fulfilling the ambitious goal of keeping temperature increases below 2oC would reduce annual world GDP by a staggering 12.9%, or $40 trillion, in 2100.
The benefits, added up, would be worth $3
trillion.
More than 300 million women per year are victims, with the annual social cost reaching a staggering $4.4
trillion.
Dramatically lower share prices and a 35% fall in home prices reduced household wealth by $14 trillion, a loss equal to 140% of annual disposable income.
The Chinese government sits atop an astonishing level of foreign reserves – greater than $2
trillion.
The EFSF will have at most €440 billion at its disposal (any increase would endanger France’s AAA rating), while the combined public debt of Italy and Spain is more than €2
trillion.
That is good news, but it is still far short of the $1.1
trillion
per year that the International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates is needed in the low-carbon energy sector.
According to Morgan Stanley, SWF’s are expected to manage $12
trillion
by 2015, up from about $2.5
trillion
today.
The growth of SWF’s is a direct consequence of the accumulation of more than $5
trillion
in foreign reserves by emerging-market economies in Asia and among oil and commodity exporting countries.
Of course, so long as the US runs annual current-account deficits of almost a
trillion
dollars, it will need to borrow from strategic rivals such as China, Russia, and unstable Middle East petro-states, which increasingly will lend in the form of high-yield equity investments rather than low-yield T-bills.
An expansion of trade, with estimated benefits exceeding $100
trillion
annually toward the end of the century, would do thousands of times more good than timid feel-good policies that result from fear-mongering.
Today, Italy’s public debt stands at 126% of GDP, and Greece’s hovers above 165% of GDP – though, at more than €1.9
trillion
($2.5 trillion), Italy’s debt is much larger than Greece’s €310 billion debt in absolute terms.
For every country to attain per capita GDP of $13,000 (which, according to the World Bank, delineates high-income status), global GDP would need to rise from roughly $72
trillion
today to $91
trillion.
If, however, we already use the equivalent of 1.5 earths to provide the resources we consume and to absorb our waste, the planet can sustainably support a GDP of only $48-50
trillion.
They can see that after three large asset-purchase programs, the Fed’s balance sheet has more than quadrupled since 2007, totaling about $4.5
trillion
in February 2015.
But, according to US Treasury data, China’s holdings of US government securities totaled $1.16
trillion
at the end of 2010, accounting for roughly 60% of the overall increase in foreign official holdings of US government debt.
From 1997 to 2007, the US net investment deficit widened by only $0.3 trillion, while the net investment surpluses of China, Japan, and Germany rose by $1.2 trillion, $1.1 trillion, and $0.8 trillion, respectively.
The major investment-deficit players were the eurozone minus Germany, with a deficit of $2.4
trillion
during that decade, and the UK, with a deficit of $0.5
trillion.
Over the next seven years, until 2014, America’s net investment position deteriorated by $5.7 trillion, producing a liability of 40.2% of GDP.
Meanwhile, Germany’s net investment surplus increased by $0.8 trillion, Japan’s rose by $1.2 trillion, and China’s was up by $0.7
trillion.
The rest of the world’s net investment position strengthened by $3
trillion
during this period, owing mainly to the commodity boom, which faded as China slowed.
The rapid growth in America’s gross liabilities to the rest of the world is apparent in US Treasury data on foreign holdings of US securities, which rose from $9.8
trillion
in 2007 to $17.1
trillion
by June 2015, of which $10.5
trillion
was debt and $6.6
trillion
equity.
China has long sought to place Asia on par with North America and Western Europe in terms of connectivity – a project that the Asian Development Bank estimated in 2009 would cost $8
trillion
by 2020.
Financing the Green EconomyBEIJING – According to new estimates that will be presented at this year’s World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, $100
trillion
is needed by 2030 to finance infrastructure needs worldwide.
Additional outlays of $140 billion annually are required just to green the estimated $15
trillion
investment in energy generation needed by 2020.
Even if the cap were applied only to “itemized deductions” and the health-insurance exclusion, it would raise about $250 billion in the first year and about $3
trillion
over the first decade.
Relative to the size of China’s foreign debt and the sheer volume of money that could go abroad, even its $3.7
trillion
in foreign reserves starts to look puny.
According to a 2015 McKinsey report, improving worldwide gender equality could add $12
trillion
to global GDP by 2025.
Last year’s $600 billion QE2 and $1
trillion
in tax cuts and transfers delivered growth of barely 3% for one quarter.
Big Brother won’t be watching you; but a
trillion
little brothers might be.
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