Friday, April 13, 2007

Best Between Carl Zeiss And Sony Lenses

In pensione per farsi riassumere


Increasingly in the United States, retirees devote themselves to work, rather than to cruises and grandchildren. In Arizona, a school has set up a thriving business by hiring new teachers who retired. In Chicago, the mayor has allowed the head of the firefighters went into retirement and then give him a contract as security chief of the city. And of course the income flies, because they sum the board with the new salary.
"Double-dipping" is the term used by the Economist, the British weekly, for this practice. How to explain this expression? I am reminded of one that makes a "shoe" in his plate and also in the pan. Why not? In some U.S. states this double income is prohibited, but not all. A New York public employees can return to work the day after he retired now, but the new salary is under one roof. The Economist is also my question: why an aging society, and that soon will have too few active workers to maintain the army of pensioners, should fear that someone possesses this dual role (employee and retiree)? The double-dippers have earned a pension and now you earn a salary. In most pay taxes and contributions and help to alleviate the problem demgrafico. Or not? The Economist
http://www.economist.com/index.html

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