[Grammar] Higher than for?

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patran

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Dear Teachers

Is it necessary to have "for" in the following sentence?

Although valuations are somewhat higher than for other developed markets.


Regards

Anthony the learner
 

BobSmith

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[AmE - not a teacher]

IMO, it is not necessary; that is, it works either way. Note, that your example is not a complete sentence.
 

bhaisahab

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It doesn't work for me without a preposition.
 

patran

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Dear Bhaisahab

So you mean, it must have "for"? Why is that the case? Could you give me more clues?

Thanks
It doesn't work for me without a preposition.
 

BobSmith

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It doesn't work for me without a preposition.

Actually, I was wrong and bhaisahab is right; you need the preposition. (Without it, you're saying "valuations are higher than other markets", but that doesn't make sense - valuations can only be higher FOR other markets. "Valuations" and "markets" are different things, so one can't be "higher" than the other.)
 
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