With a few exceptions, returns to households from wildlife are generally less than $30.00 perannum.From theCambridge English Corpus
These fortunate circumstances meant that the company could pay its shareholders their capital back and even distribute a perannumdividend of 2 per cent.From theCambridge English Corpus
It finds that at current levels, charges are likely to reduce returns on individual account balances by around 1 % perannumon average.From theCambridge English Corpus
Most important was the local nature of the mortgage market in which ' custom ' prevented interest rates from floating above six per cent perannum.From theCambridge English Corpus
Purchase costs distributed over estimated working life and discounted at 5% perannum.From theCambridge English Corpus
The annual death toll went in both towns from less than 5,000 burials perannumaround 1600 to around 20,000 in the 1670s.From theCambridge English Corpus
In the past 25 years real per capita income growth has averaged 5.4 per cent perannum.From theCambridge English Corpus
These saved time by simultaneously testing varieties on farmers' fields and on the research station thus increasing the effective genetic gain perannum.From theCambridge English Corpus
Short-term internal rates are likely therefore to be 5 to 6 per cent perannumand long-term rates about 6 per cent.From theCambridge English Corpus
Current capacity is what the firm could produce perannum.From theCambridge English Corpus
This would imply a rate of deforestation of the order of 0.7 per cent perannum.From theCambridge English Corpus
The overall increase in world population (currently 1.7% perannum) is partly to blame, especially in the third world.From theCambridge English Corpus
A ceiling of 7500 perannumwas imposed on the issue of vouchers in 1965.From theCambridge English Corpus
The mean growth rate is estimated to be 0.008 per quarter (or, 3.2 percent perannum).From theCambridge English Corpus
Some patients, approximately 5-10% perannum, will fail to respond having previously done so - the so-called secondary failures.From theCambridge English Corpus
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.