1 to increase over a period of time, or to get an amount of something gradually over time:
3 to allow something to increase in amount over a period of time:
4 if a payment or an advantage accrues to you, you receive it or have the right to receive it:
accrue to sb Building societies are mutually owned, and benefits accrue to members rather than shareholders.
The school district is being criticized for allowing $74 million in vacation pay to accrue to school administrators and other nonteachers.
This statement means that the use of other resources can be disregarded, as they should accrue similarly in both groups.
The reduction of the cost of capital raises the equilibrium value of capital intensity, making the flow of profits accruing to a successful innovator grow.
Banks finance entrepreneurs and maximize profits or bank capital accruing to current shareholders.
Others voiced uncertainty about what benefits would accrue in policies and programmes.
A typical characteristic of these average-salary schemes is that indexation of all accrued liabilities is made dependent on the solvency position of the pension fund.
In section 4.2 we conjectured that significant benefits might accrue from incorporating an enumeration/evaluation measure into a psychological learning model.
The extent to which rents accrue through these corporate interlocks can only be speculative.
Table 3 presents the proportion of people in mid-life with any state pension entitlements accrued through either contributions or credits by age and caring status.