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page 80 sorry paragraph 84, you address the issue of what a reasonable excuse might be. the first point you make is that the regulations themselves contained list of reasonable excuses but they weren t the same in the different countries of the uk. 0bviously weren t the same in the different countries of the uk. obviously a problem for you. it countries of the uk. obviously a problem for you. countries of the uk. obviously a problem for you. it was i think even further than problem for you. it was i think even further than the problem for you. it was i think even further than the fact problem for you. it was i think even further than the fact that problem for you. it was i think even further than the fact that they - further than the fact that they weren t further than the fact that they weren t necessarily in the different countries, weren t necessarily in the different countries, but evenjust weren t necessarily in the different countries, but even just th ....
Government ignores MBIE s advice to delay and reduce minimum wage hike 6 Jan, 2021 04:00 PM 6 minutes to read Willie Jackson, the Government s holiday period Duty Minister, (pictured here with Finance Minister Grant Robertson, left) defended the minimum wage decision. Photo / Mark Mitchell The Government s decision to push ahead with a large minimum wage hike in April flouts bureaucrats advice to both delay and severely temper the increase. The Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment (MBIE) provided the Government with a review, dated December 2020, which advised delaying the 2021 minimum wage increase until October, and prescribed only a very modest rise of 25 cents, or 1.3 per cent. ....