Pension
in sentence
830 examples of Pension in a sentence
They weren't required to sell dope or guns to get a good
pension.
the government that he fought to establish to recognize his loyalty with a promised and much needed
pension.
Unlike the absurdity of WAITING FOR GODOT, the Colonel's wait for the arrival of his
pension
gives hope and significance to his otherwise miserable life.
Two things in the film drive the Colonel who is masterfully played by Fernando Lujan; the hope that his military
pension
will one day arrive and the knowledge that his son, Agustin, died for a noble cause, a reason other than a drunken fracas at a rigged cockfight.
In a tense scene of confrontation between the Colonel and Nogales, his son's killer, the Colonel is offered by Nogales, a paid government agent, money enough to equal the Colonel's full
pension.
Life's going not to badly for Harry Mitchell, he's an ex-air force major (plus nifty little
pension
I imagine), who's raking in the cash for a patent he's developed (fusing titanium and steel via explosive process, creating super metal fit for NASA), and his wife of twenty-odd years has kept herself in pretty good nick.
She moves alone to an isolated island, where she meets a stranger and lodges in a
pension
where he is living for the last months.
He lives with his parents who are old and retired and live on a small
pension.
It blows my mind to think that this was a box office hit, but then again, we Americans seem to have a
pension
for paying top dollar for moron-entertainment.
Into this conflict comes Larry, an American pianist, who with his girlfriend Miranda run a small
pension.
Embezzeling funds from a
pension
fund is no big deal either.
In one, you are thinking about a problem - say, what
pension
plan you should join - logically and analytically.
And the IMF did impose conditions on its loans to Greece – including fiscal austerity, privatization, and structural reform of its
pension
and tax systems – most of which were necessary to address the country’s insolvency.
Making
pension
systems sustainable does not amount to making them stingier.
Central banks frequently stress the limits of their powers, and bemoan lack of government progress toward “structural reform” – a catch-all phrase covering trade liberalization, labor- and product-market reforms, and measures to address medium-term fiscal challenges, such as
pension
age increases.
Hong Kong ’s government, led by the HKMA, launched an unprecedented intervention, buying up local shares to “defeat” the speculators, but failed to stop the stampede by global investors, including conservative
pension
and mutual funds.
Reform of the
pension
system is often attacked as a zero-sum game, in which whatever one person loses another gains.
It, too, failed to carry out health care and
pension
reforms even if resistance at that time came from different interest groups.
For the age group over 50, the structure of
pension
systems is clearly a major factor.
This problem grips the postcommunist countries, where ageing populations are locked in a fiscally fatal combination with bloated Soviet-style
pension
systems.
Indeed, from now on, the central government will take over social-security expenditure, establishing nationally unified
pension
and health-insurance systems, while the retirement age will be raised gradually.
And, indeed, debt and unfunded non-debt liabilities increasingly weigh down public-sector balance sheets and
pension
funds, eroding the foundations of resilient, sustainable growth.
Large pools of savings in sovereign wealth funds,
pension
funds, and insurance companies could be used, for example, to meet emerging economies’ huge financing needs for infrastructure and urbanization.
While past experience indicates that constraining spending growth will not be easy, especially with the aging of the post-1945 baby-boom generation fueling rising health-care and
pension
costs, many countries – including Canada, the United Kingdom, Sweden, and even the US itself – have managed to do so in recent decades.
Yes, the US should worry about its soaring public debt – and about the rising
pension
and health-care costs that are fueling it.
For example, as the old-age dependency ratio rises, so will health-care and
pension
costs.
For example, in deciding how their
pension
savings will be allocated, most people simply choose the default option in their employer-offered plan.
Moreover, austerity has been accompanied by structural reforms, which should increase countries’ long-term growth potential, while
pension
reforms are set to reduce considerably the fiscal cost of aging populations.
Does anyone remember that after his re-election Bush promised to reform the
pension
system (“Social Security”)?
(In that case, he would have had to leave office without a valuable pension.)
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