wage ceilings in a sentence
- The problem, however, is that his job has a wage ceiling of about $ 8.40 an hour.
- The core of the dispute is the owners'desire for a wage ceiling and the players'bitter opposition to it.
- Employers pay 6.2 % up to the wage ceiling and the Medicare tax of 1.45 percent on all income.
- Though, it supported Great Britain in World War II, the Pilot was critical of war policies such as price controls and wage ceilings.
- As long as outside contractors remain a threat to Harvard employees, the committee said, any wage floor would end up becoming a wage ceiling.
- It's difficult to find wage ceilings in a sentence.
- They also called for the raise to be retroactive as of last October and for a dlrs 1, 800 increase in the company wage ceiling.
- The strike began Aug . 12 and centers on the owners'desire for a wage ceiling and the players'bitter opposition to any form of salary cap.
- After decades of social democratic governments, the Swedish children's author Astrid Lindgren faced an infamous marginal tax rate of 102 % in 1976, in effect creating a wage ceiling.
- For good measure, why not up the ante and exempt, say, the first $ 12, 000 or $ 15, 000 of wages and remove the taxable wage ceiling on the employee's portion?
- There is no telling how the Bruins will treat him come contract time, but Ray Bourque's $ 3.5 million has been the established wage ceiling here, and it's likely Allison will test that ceiling, possibly to the point of shattering it.
- Pressed by the conservative opposition, he has agreed to raise the wage ceiling for so-called " mini-jobs, " where workers are exempt from all social welfare contributions, from $ 341 to $ 419 a month; those earning $ 420-$ 840 would pay reduced rates.
- The G-14 _ composed of Manchester United, Liverpool, Real Madrid, Barcelona, Juventus, Inter Milan and AC Milan, Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund, Marseille, Paris Saint-Germain, Ajax, PSV Eindhoven and Porto _ met in Barcelona two weeks ago and agreed to the principle of a wage ceiling, which they want in place by 2003.
- The influential G-14 lobbying group of European clubs _ composed of Manchester United, Liverpool, Real Madrid, Barcelona, Juventus, Inter Milan and AC Milan, Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund, Marseille, Paris Saint-Germain, Ajax, PSV Eindhoven and Porto _ met in Barcelona two weeks ago and agreed to the principle of a wage ceiling, which they want in place by 2003.