Sentences with phrase «cent of the amount even»

Not exact matches

Additional uncertainty in these calculations arises from the assumption that a 10 per cent GST has the same effect on the retail price as a 10 per cent WST, even though the WST is levied at an earlier stage of production and therefore represents a smaller amount of tax for a given tax rate.
«The idea is that a small reduction in alcohol — such as beer with four per cent ethanol content versus six per cent — would reduce alcohol intake per drinker even if the same overall amount of beverage is consumed,» says Dr. Jürgen Rehm, lead author and Director of the Institute for Mental Health Policy Research at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in Toronto, Canada.
On average, data - based capital contributed just 0.015 per cent to UK GDP each year over the period studied by the team, even though investment in data - based assets in the UK reached US$ 7 billion in 2013 — which equates to around 40 per cent of the amount invested in R&D.
A declining exponential regression fitted to the data (y = 13.039 e − 3.040 x) suggests that reproductive success declines by approximately 50 per cent, with 20 per cent admixture indicating that even small amounts of non-native rainbow trout introgression rapidly reduce reproductive success in later - generation hybrids (figures 1 and 2).
It definitely requires a certain amount of passion to post day after day even if you aren't making a cent.
Teacher salaries are often 70, even 80 per cent of a school organisation's overall budget - that is a huge amount of money being allocated to human capital.
Even though the front grille appears larger than before, it's actually 20 per cent smaller to ingest only the amount of air needed for combustion and cooling.
Even at 99 cents, you can do pretty well for the amount of work that goes into a short story.
An unscrupulous individual saw an outlet for making quick money — even while listing himself alongside the author and charging only 99 cents for each language's edition of these works — and dealt another blow to the credibility of authors who do put forth incredible amounts of time, talent, effort, and even financial resources to ensure that their works are well - received and worthy reads.
This is because even for the most expensive equities, those fractional shares would still not be worth whole cent amounts, even for account balances in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Commercial businesses could cut even greater amounts, and even a car manufacturing giant like BMW could produce 490MWh of solar electricity per year using its own land, or 29 per cent of the group - wide electricity demand.
This amounts to almost 2 per cent of our GDP, a huge chunk of change, and if even a portion of this revenue is spent on government programs, we are going to put a huge burden on Canadian consumers and companies.
Particularly interesting are the low - end offerings; one of the advantages of Bitcoin is that it makes it much easier than almost any other consumer e-commerce system to manage very small amounts of money, and so the Bitcoin community has a number of offerings that take less than a few dollars, or even cents, to get started.
Tiny payments are possible: since fees are proportional to the payment amount, you can pay a fraction of a cent; accounting is even done in thousandths of a satoshi.
2009 saw record numbers of university leavers and new figures show more than 660,000 people have applied for a university place for the next academic year. This staggering amount is up by 12 per cent from last year, once again breaking the record for the number of university applicants. With these figures on the rise, the coalition government have made an extra 10,000 university places to support the hefty amount of applications, meaning more students than ever will be graduating with degrees in the coming years. It is becoming even harder for employers to recruit graduates when they simply can not distinguish who is more qualified for the job â $ «how does one chose between the graduate with the 2:1 History degree from Durham or the 2:1 English Literature graduate from Bristol?
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