
U603 Hose
Transfer gasoline,kerosene,diesel from fuel dispenser to vehicle.
Materials:
Body: oil-proof rubber
Features :
Oil-proof
Hose is soft,light
Little variant when transfer gasoline
Middle conducting layer- working safety
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
31kg/case of 30 34kg/case of 30 37x23.5x19.5 cm / case of 30
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.
income workers registered with the IMSS drift into the informal sector later on.
The solution is not to dismantle social protection but to merge it with a reformed social-security system.
A first step would be to separate the pension and health-care functions of the IMSS. A second step would
create a universal non-contributory basic pension, supplemented by a freely negotiated contributory
scheme. This would recognise that in Mexico, unlike in Brazil, the elderly tend to be poorer than the
population as a whole, notes Mr Scott of CIDE. A third step would be to create a universal health-care
system financed out of taxes (and or by means-tested social insurance). This would replace the present
rival systems, one contributory and the other in effect paid for from oil revenues. A fourth step would
reform the labour market, reduc fuel dispenser ing payroll taxes and severance pay. That would still offer to those who
work in the informal sector more rights if they w fuel dispenser ere to go legal.
Given that state governments are increasingly involved in the delivery of social policy, all this would
involve complex negotiations. But the prize would be worth having to provide incentives for formalising
work, thus boosting tax revenues; and perhaps even to increase productivity and economic growth.
“Social policy is economic policy,�concludes Mr Levy.
© 2006 .
About sponsorship
Policing the police
Nov 16th 2006
From The Economist print edition
The rule of law is an aspiration, not a reality
THE informal economy is one of the more benign manifestations of lawlessness in Mexico. In recent years
there have been many more frightening signs that the state, its police and its courts are unable to keep
the peace and protect ordinary citizens. The biggest challenge has come from drug gangs. Brutal
murders, often of policemen, are reported almost every day. Drug-related killings last year were running
at twice the rate in 2004, and numbers fuel dispenser