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golden handcuffs
[gohl-duhn hand-kuhfs]
plural noun
incentives like bonuses, raises, insurance plans, and flexible hours that discourage employees from leaving a company.
She wasn’t especially happy in her job, but the healthcare benefits were the golden handcuffs that kept her from looking elsewhere.
golden handcuffs
plural noun
informalpayments deferred over a number of years that induce a person to stay with a particular company or in a particular job
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of golden handcuffs1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
“It’s like golden handcuffs because where do you find a salary that matches what you had?”
According to Leo Peak, a real estate agent at Peak Family Real Estate Group, many homeowners are currently feeling the "golden handcuffs" effect of being locked into their homes by historically low mortgage rates.
“Because of high interest rates,” he said, “there’s no mobility out of rental situations to buy homes. Everyone is stuck — homeowners with golden handcuffs, renters basically with unadorned handcuffs.”
"Buyers are jumping back in the fray as the new normal of rates are setting in. Homeowners who would typically sell their home, however, have the golden handcuffs of yesterday's rates making it much more attractive to stay put," says Rachel Mehmedagic, owner of Windermere Real Estate's office on Mercer Island in the Seattle region.
Advisers had counseled him that a possible indictment by a Manhattan grand jury involving hush-money payments to an adult-film star would not come for some time — if at all — and Trump had even begun joking about “golden handcuffs,” said one person who spoke with him in recent days.
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