The part of an economy that is controlled by the state.
(经济中的)国营部分;公营部分
as modifierpublic-sector salaries
Example sentencesExamples
The public-sector activities of child care, education and health care account for a significant proportion of employment.
Private backers who could afford it foot the bill, and it looks like there may be some cool industrial and public-sector applications.
The workers are members of the NIPSA public-sector trade union.
Demonising public-sector employment per se would be unjust and ignorant.
Most public-sector unions in the 1960s and '70s first developed from minority representation.
And one wonders at the public-sector whistleblowers' consequent employment prospects in the private sector.
The government says it has to limit public-sector pay increases to stick to an IMF-prescribed economic programme.
Federal aid in this light provides a modest centralization of public-sector finance for the United States as a whole.
The different circumstances of a public-sector strike also come into play.
When it makes the move next month, the NHS Confederation will become the first public-sector organisation to be based in Brewery Wharf.
On the public-sector side, the country's economic slump has caused what many firms see as serious consequences.
These public-sector funds are uniquely powerful for two reasons.
But couldn't the public-sector unions still trigger a labor uprising?
The reason for this dramatic increase in public-sector inflation is that public sector wages are growing at ever faster rates.
But of all the possible security executive jobs out there, none is probably as challenging as the public-sector job.
The current public-sector pay agreement with the State Government prevents the union initiating a pay case at this time.
Yet it is widely known that much of the public-sector spending has resulted in substandard infrastructure that has crumbled within a short period of time.
This was followed shortly thereafter by a public-sector wage and hiring freeze.
Post-war public-sector growth in South Africa reflected that in many industrial economies with social democratic governments.
As she put it, each head of a public-sector organisation should be aware of the responsibilities that they assume and what is expected from them.
Definition of public sector in US English:
public sector
nounˈpəblɪk ˈsɛktərˈpəblik ˈsektər
The part of an economy that is controlled by the government.
(经济中的)国营部分;公营部分
as modifierpublic-sector salaries
Example sentencesExamples
Post-war public-sector growth in South Africa reflected that in many industrial economies with social democratic governments.
The workers are members of the NIPSA public-sector trade union.
Yet it is widely known that much of the public-sector spending has resulted in substandard infrastructure that has crumbled within a short period of time.
This was followed shortly thereafter by a public-sector wage and hiring freeze.
The government says it has to limit public-sector pay increases to stick to an IMF-prescribed economic programme.
But couldn't the public-sector unions still trigger a labor uprising?
On the public-sector side, the country's economic slump has caused what many firms see as serious consequences.
Private backers who could afford it foot the bill, and it looks like there may be some cool industrial and public-sector applications.
The different circumstances of a public-sector strike also come into play.
Most public-sector unions in the 1960s and '70s first developed from minority representation.
But of all the possible security executive jobs out there, none is probably as challenging as the public-sector job.
Demonising public-sector employment per se would be unjust and ignorant.
Federal aid in this light provides a modest centralization of public-sector finance for the United States as a whole.
And one wonders at the public-sector whistleblowers' consequent employment prospects in the private sector.
As she put it, each head of a public-sector organisation should be aware of the responsibilities that they assume and what is expected from them.
The reason for this dramatic increase in public-sector inflation is that public sector wages are growing at ever faster rates.
The current public-sector pay agreement with the State Government prevents the union initiating a pay case at this time.
The public-sector activities of child care, education and health care account for a significant proportion of employment.
These public-sector funds are uniquely powerful for two reasons.
When it makes the move next month, the NHS Confederation will become the first public-sector organisation to be based in Brewery Wharf.