
U608 Swivel
U608 Swivel is designed for use between the hose and the pipe, or between the hose and other equipments.
Materials:
Body: Aluminum
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U608-A/B 26.5kg/case of 100 30kg/case of 100 27x27x31 cm /case of 100
U608-C/D 20.25kg/case of 50 23kg/case of 50 30x30x17 cm /case of 50
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
s the DCA s consultation, for example, criticised the £2.8 billion spent last year on private-sector
consultants. There are better targets for penny-pinching than the cheap and effective Freedom of
Information Act, but watering it down might make official lives a bit easier.
© 2006 .
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Living standards
The big squeeze
Dec 19th 2006
From The Economist print edition
Wage negotiations in early 2007 will be a tussle
SOME of the reasons for voters to be grumpy with the government—such as the war in Iraq and the titles-
for-cash investigation—are widely discussed. Other grievances are less frequently aired, but probably no
less important. fuel dispenser The squeeze on living standards in recent years belongs to the s fuel dispenser econd category.
During the past two decades, real disposable income per person has grown at an average rate of 2.7% a
year. In the first five years of Labour s period in office (until 2001), it increased even faster, at an annual
rate of 3.0%. But since then its growth has halved to just 1.5% a year.
The fuel dispenser slowdown partly reflects a decline in economic growth after the dotcom crash at the start of the
century. But higher taxes have also taken their toll. In 2003, for example, national-insurance contributions
went up by £8 billion a year, split half and half between employers and employees. Firms responded by
keeping wages down, which made it even more painful for staff to stump up their own higher
contributions. Meanwhile income-tax payers have suffered from “fiscal drag� which sucks in more receipts
automatically when the tax thresholds rise by less than nominal income growth.
Higher debt-servicing charges have also been eating into budgets. Payments have risen because debt has
soared and the base interest rate has returned to a more normal level of 5% after the low of 3.5% in
2003.
As if this were not enough, energy costs have risen steeply. Altogether the share of pre-t