Example sentences of "from its [adj] level " in BNC.

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1 a measure of the deviation of government expenditure from its normal level .
2 It is not all that many months ago that the right hon. Gentleman was saying to the House and to people beyond it that the most important thing was to get inflation down from its then level of 10.9 per cent .
3 Despite intensive drilling , production has steadily fallen from its 1973 level of 9.2m barrels a day ; the government 's energy forecasters think it could be less than 6m b/d by 2000 .
4 Employment here peaked in 1975 and had somewhat recovered from its lowest level of 1981 by 1984 .
5 The national debt surged from its 1756 level of £74.6 million to reach £231 million by the end of the American war in 1783 and £820 million by the time of Waterloo .
6 He is also attempting to push through a plan to increase the EC Budget by 30 per cent — costing British taxpayers an additional £1 billion a year — with the aim of raising the Budget from its present level of about £4 billion to £30 billion by 1997 .
7 King said that the existing army strength of 155,000 personnel would be reduced to 116,000 by 1992 , and the combined armed forces would shrink by 62,000 from its present level of 308,000 .
8 The total of non-recyclable waste produced by industry and individuals is to be reduced from its present level of 20 million tonnes to 12 million tonnes by 2000 .
9 He has remorselessly plugged the necessity for structural change — referring at one time to the need to halve steel production from its current level of 14 million tonnes .
10 The package of fiscal policies aimed to cut the budget deficit from its current level of about 50 billion forints ( £500 million ) to 10 billion forints .
11 VAT could be cut from its current level of 17½ per cent to give a boost to the shops but that would leave the Government short of cash .
12 How about the BMA really setting the government an example by ( a ) encouraging all its disabled staff to register as disabled with guarantees of no discrimination , and ( b ) taking prompt action to move from its current level of 1.5% of workforce disabled , towards the 3% target as laid out in the 1944 Disabled Persons Employment Act ?
13 German Economics Minister Jürgen Möllemann visited India on Nov. 19 , while on Nov. 8 German Economic Co-operation Minister Carl-Dieter Spranger announced that development assistance to India would be cut by 25 per cent in 1992 from its current level of DM395,000,000 ( US$245,000,000 ) because of India 's " excessive armament " .
14 Richardson stated that her aim was the reduction of public expenditure from its current level of 41.7 per cent of GNP to the 1970 level of 30 per cent by the end of the decade .
15 Proposed permanent tax changes included ( i ) a phased reduction in capital gains tax from its current level of 28 per cent to 15.4 per cent on assets held for three or more years , to 19.6 per cent for assets held for two years and to 23.8 per cent for assets held for one year ; ( ii ) greater flexibility for individual retirement accounts ( IRAs ) ; ( iii ) the repeal of the luxury tax on boats and aircraft ; and ( iv ) a tax credit of up to $3,750 to help poor families finance health insurance premiums .
16 The package , which included an ambitious capital works and infrastructure programme , was designed to reduce unemployment from its current level of 11 per cent to 10 per cent by mid-1993 .
17 It was predicted that inflation would rise from its current level of 1.2 per cent to around 3 per cent .
18 The rate has been reduced from its previous level of 9.75% in accordance with an undertaking made in the 1991 Budget to keep it broadly in line with mortgage rates .
19 Grouping carbon dioxide and all the other greenhouse gases together , most computer models predict that an increase in greenhouse gases equivalent to a doubling of carbon dioxide concentration from its pre-industrial level will be reached during the decade of the 2030s ( even if CFCs are rapidly phased out as planned ) .
20 The Danish government presented on Aug. 27 an austerity budget for 1992 , which it said would reduce the state deficit from its expected level of Dkr35,800 million in 1991 to around DKr30,500 million ( $2,700 million ) .
21 Only unforeseen or unexpected price changes will cause output to deviate from its natural level .
22 As a result a random increase in aggregate demand is likely to produce a positive deviation of aggregate output from its natural level .
23 The only possible way in which a government might try to use its ability to affect aggregate demand , in order to influence the level of aggregate output , would be to introduce random movements in its policies and hence random movements in aggregate demand which , as we have shown above , would produce deviations of aggregate output away from its natural level .
24 We also derived the result that aggregate output , y t , would be disturbed from its natural level , β only by the unpredictable component of the quantity of money , v t .
25 This persistence might be seen as an obvious contradiction of the prediction that deviations of output from its natural level should be random and hence a clear refutation of the rational expectations version of the aggregate supply and demand model developed above .
26 Variations in g then do not lead to deviations of output from its natural level , which is the result derived in chapter 4 .
27 The model developed in chapter 4 suggested that only the unpredictable component of aggregate demand would cause output to deviate from its natural level , and the more unpredictable it was the less effect it would have on the deviation of real output from its natural rate .
28 Thus Lucas can be seen to be estimating a regression for each country in which that country 's deviation of real output from its natural level is regressed on its own lagged value and Lucas 's measure of the unpredictable and therefore unanticipated component of aggregate demand .
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