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Hence an investigation was launched to investigate the claims that millions of employees had been led astray with the advice to contract out of SERPS. As the government began to question the long-term affordability of the SERPS, they offered incentives to encourage people to opt out of the SERPS into an Appropriate Personal Pension (APP).
Earnings in the lowest band are treated as though they were actually at the threshold of the next band. Thus, under SERPS, earnings of £10,000 a year would produce a pension of just £939 a year - 20 per cent of (£10,000 - £5,304) – whereas under S2P the same earnings would lead to a pension of £3,638 a year – 40 per cent of (£14,400 - £5,304) – nearly four times as much.
SERPS may refer to: State Earnings-Related Pension Scheme, a UK Government pension arrangement from April 6, 1978 to April 5, 2002; SERPs, short for search engine ...
"If I Could Turn Back Time" is a pop rock and soft rock song that features instrumentation from guitars, piano and drums. The song received mostly positive reviews from music critics , who applauded its overall production and Cher's vocal performance, with some considering it to be a highlight of the album.
"You must not pity me in this last turn of fate. You should rather be happy in the remembrance of our love, and in the recollection that of all men I was once the most famous and the most powerful, and now, at the end, have fallen not dishonorably, a Roman by a Roman vanquished."
[6] [7] Millar had intended the "you turn if you want to" line, which preceded it, to be the most popular, and it received an ovation itself, but it was "the lady's not for turning" that received the headlines. [6] The speech as a whole was very warmly received at the conference, and received a five-minute standing ovation. [3]
"Never Turn Your Back on Mother Earth" is a song by the American rock group Sparks. The song was recorded by the group's mid-1970s glam line-up. It was released in late 1974 as the first single from the group's fourth album, Propaganda .
This article surveys the terms which are encountered in Israeli narratives that zoomorphically classify Palestinians [1] as members of different kinds of non-human species, as opposed to commonly-used derogatory terms like "(sand)niggers", [2] [a] "savages" or "red Indians", [b] that simply imply racial inferiority. [3]