The new
total grows at that same rate monthly until the next payment, and so on.
Not exact matches
You'd think that corporate debt would
grow in proportion to
total sales, as this additional debt is used to fund investments in productive activities that create more sales and contribute to the economy, and that higher sales, and presumably higher earnings would create a proportionate increase in the value of the company, and thus in its stock price, and that they all go up together, not in lockstep but over time more or less
at the
same rate.
If the population keeps
growing at that
same rate, and the U.S. continues to add jobs near 2013's pace, then the
total number of nonfarm jobs in the U.S. won't get back to where they should be until 2019.
We estimate
total enrollment for earlier years assuming that both types of institutions
grew at the
same rate in the year of the change, and that enrollment
at these institutions was a constant fraction of
total enrollment.
If production on federal lands had
grown at the
same rate as overall U.S. production, from 2009 through 2015,
total royalties would have been 31 percent higher, with an additional $ 20 billion in royalties collected by the federal government.