Examples of using Percentage points lower in English and their translations into Finnish
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Financial
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Colloquial
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Official
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Medicine
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Ecclesiastic
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Official/political
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Computer
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Programming
Overall the expenditure ratio in 1997 was more than 6 percentage points lower than at the beginning of the 1990s,
which is 2 percentage points lower than the expected nominal GDP growth.
95% at the end of 2007, 2 percentage points lower following enlargement in 2004.
is over 20 percentage points lower than in the EU 15,
which was 2.3 percentage points lower than one year previously.
more than 2.5 percentage points lower than budgeted, and this is largely blamed on the economic downturn.
while interest payments are now nearly 4 percentage points lower.
which is 12 percentage points lower than the share of those with qualifications among the population in the same age group.
more than 2 percentage points lower than envisaged in the macroeconomic assumptions of the December 2000 update of the Irish Stability Programme.
which was 0.3 percentage points higher than the same month of last year and 0.2 percentage points lower than that of April.
average margins were estimated to be some 0.5 percentage points lower between 1987 and 1991 than they would have been in the absence of the single market,
profitability was positive both in 1997 and during the investigation period but it was 15 percentage points lower in the fourth quarter of the IP as compared to the fourth quarter of 1997.
the proportion being half a percentage point lower than the year before.
The tax rate, or the proportion of taxes and compulsory social security contributions of GDP, was 42.1 per cent last year, or one-half of a percentage point lower than in the previous year.
which was 0.2 percentage point lower than one year earlier.
In this period the hourly productivity growth stood at 1.4%, one percentage point lower than in the first half of the 1990s.
In 2007 as a whole, it stood at 2.3%, 0.2 percentage point lower than in 2006.
By 1997 it was 14 percentage points lower, at 60.5% compared with 74% in the US.
Before the crisis, Europe's employment rates were several percentage points lower than those of the US and Japan.
Yet in 2005 employment rates in the lagging regions were still some 11 percentage points lower than those in the rest of the Union.