
U105 Nozzle Boot
Materials:
Body: Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U105-A 1.5kg/case of1 1.6kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-B 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-C 1.1kg/case of1 1.2kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-D 1.3kg/case of1 1.4kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-E 1.5kg/case of1 1.6kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-F 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-G 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
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.
Mr Bush has returned to the tried and tested boosterism about the benefits of tax cuts. Listen to his
recent speeches and the economic agenda seems to have three goals. First, convince Americans that the economy
is actually doing well. Second, credit all good economic news to the tax cuts. Third, push hard for making the
existing tax cuts permanent.
No one can blame an embattled administration for focusing on the surprisingly buoyant economy. For instance, Mr
Bush is not the first president to try to grab the credit for good economic news, ignoring the role, for instance, of
low interest rates. The real chutzpah lies in the degree to which the Bush team claims that tax cuts are the cause
of the economy s strength.
The past 18 months, we are told, offer clear proof that the entrepreneurial spirits unleashed by lower taxes
boosted investment, productivity and the stockmarket. In May 2003, the administration pushed through a package
accelerating cuts in income taxes and slashing taxes on dividends and capital gains; soon afterwards investment
and output growth shot up. “Business investment l fuel dispenser iterally turned around overnight when those tax cuts took
effect,�the treasury secretary, John Snow, crowed this week. Dick Cheney joined in. “It s getting pretty hard for
the critics to make the case that somehow those tax cuts weren t good for the economy,�argued the vice-
president.
A surprising rise in tax revenue last year has pushed this chutzpah even further. Mr Bush last week implied that
the supply-side fantasy might hold after all tax cuts do pay for themselves. “There s a mindset in Washington that
says, you cut the taxes, we re going to have less money to spe fuel dispenser nd,�he noted contemptuously, before claiming that
recent experience suggested otherwise.
Even by the standards of political boosterism, this is extraordinary. No serious economist
Mr Bush is back to
believes Mr Bush s tax cuts fuel dispenser