GDP的意思和读音

GDP

: [ˌdʒi di ˈpi] : [ˌdʒiː diː ˈpiː]

abbr.(=gross domestic product)

n. gross domestic product)

(Gross Domestic Product);

GDPs  

GDPn.

1. gross domestic product)the abbreviation for‘gross domestic product’ (the total value of all the goods and services produced by a country in one year)

abbr.1.(=gross domestic product)

abbr.1.(=gross domestic product)

n.1.gross domestic product: the total value of the goods and services that a country produces in a year, not including income received from money invested in other countries

1.(Gross Domestic Product)16.1%. 2009GDP)41.79亿19999.38亿19992…

3.GDP退6.7%

4.(GDP)7.6%, 13,38。

5.GDP

6.GDP2.034亿6.48亿;7.69亿6.17亿

:,,

1.Prior to the crisis the general consensus was that rich countries could safely have public debts worth 60% of GDP.GDP60%

2.The biggest loss caused by the quake was that of life and property, but it was not included in the calculation of GDP growth, said Wang.

3.As a consequence, China endured a few years of relatively anemic growth in exports and GDP, and persistent deflation.

4.And yet per capita GDP is one-tenth that of the major developed countries.GDP

5.Spain, whose GDP is almost double that of the three rescued countries put together, has long been a source of concern.GPDGPD西广

6.Even in the United States, where tax revenues add up to less than 30% of GDP, simply raising tax rates is not the best answer.使

7.The People's Daily, the main organ of the Communist party, said the country did not need "blood-soaked GDP" .GDP”。

8.And its impact on GDP tends to be magnified in times of great financial distress, according to DB.GDP

9.GDP per person of working age rose at more than double the rate of Germany, faster than Britain and close to that of the US.GDP

10.If we all decided to take more holidays, the correlation between GDP and all that bankruptcy and misery would be broken.GDP