«No Money in the Bank» does more than layout the many dimensions of the public
sector pension crisis in crisp, highly readable prose, though it does that very well indeed.
One of your colleagues Marty Lueken, who is an expert on the public
sector pension crisis made a comment.
Not exact matches
Riding the roar from the Labour benches, he ploughed on, criticising Miliband's stance on the Greek
crisis and on public
sector pensions.
«This coming year is going to be one of the most challenging years for the trade union movement - and public
sector trade unions in particular - as the coalition government seeks to make the public
sector and its workforce pay for the
crisis, through cuts to jobs, services, pay and
pensions.
And unlike a public
sector pension plan, which is protected by the state constitution and whose benefits can't be diminished even in an economic
crisis, the retirement savings plan the city is proposing would be very much subject to the vagaries of the market.
Public
sector pensions are unaffordable, we have no money, but as long as «WE» keep borrowing and spending, then Brown can say «HE» has done a good job of pulling us through the
crisis which «HE» started.
Here's a nifty way to solve the
pension crisis: let private
sector workers join plans set up for government workers.