Trillion
in sentence
2031 examples of Trillion in a sentence
A recent study by India’s Strategic Foresight Group entitled The Cost of Conflict in the Middle East suggested that the past 20 years of conflict have cost WANA countries some $12
trillion.
Moreover, a TTIP that establishes a joint project in which the EU and the US (with GDPs of $18.5
trillion
and $17.5 trillion, respectively) are essentially equal partners could reinvigorate the bilateral relationship.
The four largest emerging markets account for more than 40% of the world’s population and have a collective GDP of nearly $9
trillion.
Eric Zitzewitz of Stanford University estimates that market timing has cost US mutual fund investors about $5 billion a year--less than 0.1% of the $7
trillion
mutual fund assets.
In fact, after running twin current- and capital-account surpluses persistently for two decades, China’s foreign-exchange reserves are poised to break the $4
trillion
threshold, with the marginal cost of every dollar accrued vastly surpassing its potential benefits.
As China’s markets expand – the capitalization of the Shanghai and Shenzhen markets is on the order of $11
trillion
– they are increasingly outstripping policymakers’ capacity to manage prices and valuations.
More than $3
trillion
will be spent on subsidies just on wind and solar photovoltaic over the next 25 years.
According to MGI, by 2035, changes in the supply and demand for major commodities could result in total cost savings of $900 billion to $1.6
trillion
worldwide.
Beyond tax reform, Trump’s plan to stimulate short-term growth through $1
trillion
in infrastructure spending is still not on the horizon.
According to conservative forecasts, its GDP will amount to around $9 trillion, with just six economies – Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, Chile, and Peru –accounting for 86% of that total.
The reported US current-account deficits from 1982 to 2013, based on subsequent revisions, total $9.5
trillion.
And yet the deterioration in the US international investment position over this period was not much more than half of that amount ($5.7
trillion
if measured relative to the revised estimate for 1981).
In the US alone, students owe more than $1 trillion, or around 6% of GDP.
A recent study by the International Monetary Fund estimated that global energy subsidies are running at more than $5
trillion
per year, while fossil-fuel subsidies in the US have been conservatively valued at $37 billion per year (not including the cost of environmental externalities).
In a penetrating analysis of the “Flash Crash” of May 6, 2010, when the Dow lost $1
trillion
of market value in 30 minutes, Andy Haldane of the Bank of England argues that while rising equity-market capitalization might well be associated with financial development and economic growth, there is no such relationship between market turnover and growth.
Leverage is increasing, with some $57
trillion
having piled up worldwide since the global financial crisis began.
The global net benefit of the increased flow of migrants for 25 years is between $13
trillion
and $39
trillion
– close to the median estimated gains from the Doha round.
The combined annual GDP of China, Japan, India, and ASEAN is $14.45 trillion, roughly equal to that of the United States, at $14.62
trillion.
Sanders is proposing about $18
trillion
of additional spending over the next decade to cover a single-payer health-care system, infrastructure investment, and “free” (that is, taxpayer-paid) tuition at public colleges.
During that period, he would impose tax hikes of $6.5 trillion, mostly on the “wealthy.”
The $11.5
trillion
deficit would eventually have to be covered by a gigantic future tax hike.
Whereas Trump proposes an outsize $10
trillion
in tax cuts and Cruz about $9
trillion
(statically scored), Rubio and Kasich have offered more economically and arithmetically plausible fiscal plans.
Exhibit A is the much-touted Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), a $1
trillion
program focused on the debt-financed construction of infrastructure in developing countries.
According to the IMF, China’s GDP will be $17.6
trillion
in 2014, outstripping US output of $17.4
trillion.
As a result, the net worth of households increased by $10
trillion
that year.
As a result, total net exports from the eurozone rose less than €3 billion ($3.2 billion) between September 2014 and September 2015 – a negligible amount in an €11
trillion
economy.
The $2.1
trillion
of previously accumulated overseas profits would be subject to a one-time tax of about 10%, to be paid over several years.
The Bush administration’s Troubled Asset Relief Program and the Obama administration’s financial rescue plan cost nearly $2.2 trillion, with the Federal Reserve purchasing a massive amount of banks’ assets.
Cutting early will cost $17.8 trillion, whereas cutting later will cost just $2
trillion.
The real cost of ambitious, early, and large carbon-cutting programs would be a reduction in growth – particularly damaging to the world’s poor – to the tune of around $40
trillion
a year.
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