Example sentences of "[noun] of inflation [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Everywhere there were shortages and , with the post-First World War period much in mind , there was a fear of inflation in the very short run , followed by deflation in the medium term .
2 Crucial to this development was that the war , by increasing the number of taxpayers and creating a fear of inflation among the equally increased number of small savers , offered important opportunities for a party that could pose as the defender of low taxes , low public expenditure , and monetary rectitude .
3 The capital gain or loss calculated for corporation tax purposes on the disposal of property , plant , equipment or other assets is usually measured as the difference between the sale price and the base cost of the asset plus a deduction for indexation ( an allowance given for the effects of inflation during the period of ownership of the asset ) .
4 There was , however , growing concern over the effects of inflation in the ROK .
5 Inflationary pressures continued in the industrialized countries in 1989 , despite a slight easing of inflation in the second half of the year , to an average annual rate of 4 per cent in the OECD countries ( compared with an overall 1989 average rate of 4.3 per cent ) .
6 I tell you in all candour that the option no longer exists , and that , insofar as it ever did exist , it only worked on each occasion since the war by injecting a bigger dose of inflation into the economy , followed by a higher level of unemployment as the next step . ’ ?
7 The internal rates of inflation of the different states are far greater than we think , but there is no way of measuring that because of the existence of a single currency .
8 By way of illustration the following table shows what £1000 will be worth in today 's money at the end of the periods shown , if annual rates of inflation over the period are as shown .
9 However , although this factor is important , it is unlikely to explain why default rates have risen so rapidly during 1990–91 compared with the early 1980s , given the much lower levels of inflation during the recent downturn .
10 ‘ This can mean that the latter does not move in response to levels of inflation in the way that the private investor thinks it should .
11 As mentioned previously , the agreement made with the IMF in May 1988 sets a target rate of inflation for the end of the year of 95 per cent .
12 Interest is added each year at the rate of inflation for the previous year in order to maintain the value of the loan in real terms .
13 He has pledged to increase support by 10 per cent above the rate of inflation for the next three years .
14 Although statistics show that many benefits paid to the old , poor and unemployed have maintained their real value ( ie kept pace with inflation ) under the Conservative government during the 1980s , these calculations are based on the rate of inflation for the average person .
15 the rate of inflation for the health service tends to be higher than the overall rate of inflation .
16 Admittedly we should compare the average rate of inflation for the whole of 1991 with the previous year .
17 Both the purchasing power of the ultimate benefit and the real cost of any future premiums payable will depend on the rate of inflation over the period of the contract .
18 By way of illustration the following table shows what £1,000 will be worth in today 's money at the end of the periods shown if the annual rate of inflation over the period is as shown :
19 The value of your eventual cash sum and monthly premiums depends on the rate of inflation over the period of the Plan .
20 Both the purchasing power of the ultimate benefit and the real cost of any future premiums/investments payable will depend on the rate of inflation over the period of the contract .
21 By way of illustration the following table shows what £1,000 will be worth in today 's money at the end of the periods shown , if the annual rate of inflation over the period is as shown .
22 Both the purchasing power of the ultimate benefit and the real cost of any future premiums/investments payable will depend on the rate of inflation over the period of the contract .
23 By way of illustration the following table shows what £1,000 will be worth in today 's money at the end of the periods shown , if the annual rate of inflation over the period is as shown .
24 The chart below shows the average percentage increase in the FT-SE 100 Index over 5 years periods ( commencing 1 January ) from 1 January 1979 to 1 January 1992 in comparison to a higher rate Building Society investment and the rate of inflation over the same periods .
25 The buying power of the benefits you get will depend on the rate of inflation over the period of the contract .
26 By way of illustration the following table shows what £1,000 will be worth in today 's money at the end of the years shown if the yearly rate of inflation over the period is as shown :
27 Faced now with an AOC budget for 1993 of £24 million — a cumulative increase in charges of nearly twenty per cent per annum — we can see no relationship between this figure and the rate of inflation over the ten year period , or with the numbers of operators ( 21 in 1983 , 246 currently ) or aircraft involved ’ .
28 As an example , suppose the nominal interest rate is 15 per cent per annum and that the rate of inflation over the past year has been 10 per cent .
29 An unemployment rate well in excess of what had hitherto been considered to be a stable NAIRU was failing to produce sustained reductions in the rate of inflation beyond the initial impact effect of the fall in aggregate demand .
30 Charges , for example , have been increased beyond the rate of inflation under the Conservatives .
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