Employees
in sentence
1157 examples of Employees in a sentence
It tightens costs, and outsources work as much as possible, so its workforce is paid less than Arcelor’s
employees
and is less stable.
This choice directly concerns more than 150,000
employees.
It would be prudent to adapt the law to this state of facts, and to give employees, too, a say in their destiny.
In 13 years, the ICTY, with 1,200 employees, spent roughly $1.25 billion to convict only a few dozen war criminals.
It also offers a perspective on why
employees
work for some employers and not others, why they work as hard as they do, and, indeed, why they go to work at all.
In organizations that function well,
employees
identify with their work and their organizations.
If
employees
feel more like insiders – a key purpose of military rituals – there is little need for incentive pay or pay-for-performance schemes.
The primary culprits are productivity growth and limited demand, which cut the share of nonfarm
employees
in manufacturing from 30% in the 1960s to 12% a generation later.
Early-retirement schemes – one-third of public-sector
employees
currently retire before the age of 55 – should be targeted immediately.
It is certainly in the interest of companies to do more to support gender equality, which expands the pool of talent from which they can select
employees
and managers.
When we are faced with conflicting choices – burden-sharing through taxation, the organization of the public sector, the status of public employees, etc. – the member states are considered to be the only bodies entitled to decide.
Consider the record of Target Malaria, the world’s largest organization undertaking gene-drive experiments, whose
employees
were included in the official negotiating teams of at least two African countries to push back against excessive limitations.
Georgia has managed to reduce low-level corruption radically, through deep staff cuts, improved compensation to remaining government employees, and stiffer penalties for bribery.
In fact, the demand for qualified blue-collar
employees
is so high that in 2015 the country’s 23 million textile workers earned, on average, $645 per month – equal to the average college graduate.
For six hours, politicians and
employees
were held at gunpoint; one hostage, Assembly President Julio Borges, described the siege as evidence of the country’s descent into complete “anarchy.”
The legislation also imposed a deadline to abolish “policy-based bankruptcy” – the practice adopted by the State Council to liquidate loss-making state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and resettle laid-off
employees.
Unlike the Bankruptcy Law, the administrative procedure has a different hierarchy of liquidation priorities: what a bankrupt SOE owes to its
employees
and the resettlement charges must be covered first and foremost by its total assets, including the enterprise’s collateral, in order to reduce dependence on local governmental budgets.
Indeed, resettlement of laid-off SOE employees, and other social implications of layoffs, should now be addressed primarily by government through the social safety net, rather than as part of the bankruptcy process.
These types of
employees
will be penalized for no good purpose under the proposed pay regimes.
Companies also need educated, hard-working, ethical
employees
and reliable, efficient suppliers.
In response to concerns among customers, employees, and shareholders, Apple has improved working conditions and agreed to regular reviews by an independent observer.
Exemptions are based on medical conditions, and are given to university students and
employees
of certain organizations (for example, the police).
Moreover, London's unique role in bringing together the full range of financial services that serve the continent – the City is home to 250 global banks with 160,000
employees
and accounts for 80% of Europe's hedge funds, 78% of its foreign-exchange trades, 74% of its derivatives, and 57% of its private equity – would be jeopardized as well.
Austria has dealt with the issue best, according to the SGI study: only 8.1% of temporary
employees
surveyed had taken temporary work because they could not find permanent positions.
The most substantial potential boost to spending comes from a temporary reduction of the payroll tax, lowering the rate paid by
employees
on income up to about $100,000 from 6.2% to 4.2%.
Singapore also pays its government
employees
well, which allows it to attract and retain top talent – and gives those whom it hires a powerful incentive to stay honest.
The government monitors what the private sector pays for a wide range of skills, positions, and tasks, and it attempts to maintain public employees’ salaries at no less than 75% of that level.
Corporate employers have responded by requiring
employees
to pay part of the insurance costs--which is, in effect, a pay cut.
In case of insolvency, a bank’s computers would not be turned off, its
employees
would not instantly be dismissed, and payment transactions would not collapse.
The answer is that fiscal policy is the key tool politicians use to attract and maintain the support of a winning coalition of voters, say retirees, public employees, and middle-class homeowners, while imposing the costs on the losers.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Companies
Which
Workers
Company
Government
Would
Employers
Firms
Customers
About
Should
Other
Business
Wages
Public
People
Where
There
Example