Pensions
in sentence
439 examples of Pensions in a sentence
We created public
pensions.
We spent the last three decades dealing with flat and falling wages and disappearing
pensions
and through-the-roof cost on housing and health care and education.
We can remember when many people had
pensions.
With savings down,
pensions
becoming a relic of the past and 401(k) plans failing millions of Americans, many near-retirees are dependent on social security as their retirement plan.
The program would complement the economic rights to old-age
pensions
and provide a more comprehensive social security program, designed to provide capital finance from cradle all the way through grave.
I'm talking about
pensions
and health care.
And yes, I hope you've been paying attention, we need to invest in babies in developed countries if we want to help save our economy and
pensions.
Forget about
pensions.
So the concerns, the xenophobic concerns of today, of migration, will be turned on their head, as we search for people to help us sort out our
pensions
and our economies in the future.
After holding in my laughs for more than was healthful, I let go--as did the others of us(we were not stoned, by the way, nor talking of insurance and pensions...).
I can watch B,B&C and feel all the emotions I felt when I first saw it at aged 18 well,maybe all but one.Certainly Miss K.Novak has lost none of her silky allure in nearly half a century.She was a thinking youth's Diana Dors.All those thinking youths now collecting their
pensions
can briefly regain the heart - clutching,collar - tightening,blood - pulsing ardour they felt when she gazed directly into their eyes back in the days when they were being told that they had never had it so good.
That is why the new deal requires that the government immediately cut pensions, hike taxes (beginning with the value-added tax), liberalize the labor market, and adhere to severe spending constraints.
It would also help if creditors understood that their contributions, like their decades of support to cohesion funds, will not impoverish them (by, say, depleting their public pensions).
In the second place, low labor force participation is a response to the heightened fiscal pressure that results from the burden of having to pay for all the retirement
pensions
of today's fifty-year-olds.
Italy's recent budget, which neither confronted the
pensions
issue nor the issue of fiscal reform, demonstrates this fully.
More importantly, his governments hesitance in addressing the countrys deep problems with its health care system, pensions, and the labor market creates a sense of political paralysis.
As a result, the need for government transfers, such as health benefits and state
pensions
will increase, but the relatively smaller share of working taxpayers in the population will make it harder to pay these charges.
The inclusion in Part II of the draft on "social rights" - such as the right not to be unjustly dismissed, or the right to receive old-age pensions, unemployment compensation, and health benefits (regardless of cost) - is in no way necessary to the functioning of the whole.
The desirability of generous public pensions, on the other hand, cannot be dissociated from their cost to taxpayers.
No less than 41% of the voting-age adult population lives primarily on government transfers such as state pensions, full-scale public stipends, unemployment benefits, disability benefits, and social assistance.
For the last four years, the LDP had shown itself to be utterly unresponsive to the key issues of popular concern: pensions, unemployment, and the fraying social safety net.
Private businesses are providing their workers with less and less in the form of defined-benefit pensions, health insurance, and other forms of insurance against life’s economic risks.
These include repealing the 2011
pensions
reform and creating a “citizen’s income” which, if poorly designed or implemented, will result in more people falling into inactivity.
Moreover, the targets mostly involved policies that do not require any supra-national coordination, such as labor policies, childcare, and
pensions.
Along with a robust system of unemployment benefits, social protections such as healthcare and
pensions
are essential for overall worker security and to ensure a healthy economy.
And most countries’ politics have proverbial “third rail” issues – policies or programs (say, state pensions) that are so sacrosanct that any policymaker who touches them faces instant political death.
This tax-favored employee saving plan is a good substitute for more comprehensive social-security pensions, but it has had the undesirable effect of increasing household saving, rather than increasing consumer spending.
Rising youth unemployment and cuts in
pensions
and social expenditures come at a time when many large multinational corporations legally avoid taxes by shifting their profits to favorable jurisdictions.
Holland does not have to sink into the North Sea before we do something about the world's climate;
pensions
do not have to decline to near-zero before social policies are adjusted.
Firms and workers in the formal sector must pay for health insurance, pensions, and other employee benefits.
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