
U602 Oil indicator
U602 series Oil Viewing Device is designed to watch whether the pipes of the fueling machine is full of liquid or not.
Materials:
Body: Iron
Viewing glass: Toughened glass
seals: Buna-N
Surface: electronic Chromium plated
Features :
U602 Oil View Device provides a 360°swivel action which can reduce the physical strain
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.
ve been a gem. According to a
research report issued on February 13th by Morgan Stanley, it recorded the highest return on
equity of any segment of the firm. It fit with Merrill s other operations, was a relatively stable
source of income, and probably would have begun to grow again as word of its improved
performance spread around. In pursuing still more growth elsewhere, has Merrill misunderstood
the value of what it already had?
© 2006 .
Economics focus
More than a notional improvement
Feb 16th 2006
From The Economist print edition
State pension systems that mimic private accounts
Get article background
IN THE less-than-cool world of public pensions, new trends come along
infrequently. For much of the past 25 years, most discussion of state pensions has
been about funding getting today s workers to save now in order to pay for their
own retirement later. Systems in many countries have moved from pay-as-you-go
financing, in which today s workers pay for today s pensions, towards individual
accounts in which workers accumulate their own cash. With Chile leading the way in 1981, this
system has proved especially popular in Latin America. Workers in a dozen countries there now
make mandatory contrib fuel dispenser utions to their personal nest eggs.
In the past decade or so, however, several European countries, led by Latvia and Sweden, have
been trying out a new style of pension. This new approach, the subject of a weighty book just
published by the World Bank*, is based on “notional�(or non-financial) defined contributions
(NDCs) by workers. It sticks with pay-as-you-go financing, but mimics a funded plan in
determining what benefits pensioners receive.
The details vary from country to country, but there is a common underlying model. As with normal
funded defined-contribution plans, each worker has an individual account. However, workers do
not actually put any money into their own pot. The amounts in their accounts are purely
“notional� T fuel dispenser fuel dispenser