Golden Handcuffs


🗓️ Idiom: Golden Handcuffs


💬 Meaning

  • Incentives, such as large bonuses or stock options, offered to employees to encourage them to stay with a company.
  • These rewards often make it financially difficult for someone to leave their job, even if they want to.

🧠 Example Sentences

  • He didn’t enjoy his job anymore, but the golden handcuffs kept him from quitting.
  • Many executives are tied to their companies by golden handcuffs in the form of long-term bonuses.
  • The company offered golden handcuffs to keep their top talent from leaving.

🏛️ Origin

The phrase originated in the 1970s and is a metaphor. “Golden” represents the financial rewards, and “handcuffs” implies being trapped or bound, showing how lucrative perks can restrict job mobility.

📝 Practice Exercises

1. Fill in the blank:

She stayed in the role for years because of the __________ handcuffs.

Answer

golden

2. Choose the correct meaning of “golden handcuffs”:

A) A contract with many restrictions
B) High pay and benefits that make it hard to leave a job
C) A policy requiring long notice periods

Answer

B) High pay and benefits that make it hard to leave a job

3. Rewrite the sentence using the idiom:

“He felt stuck in the job because he didn’t want to lose the stock options and bonuses.” → Change the sentence using: golden handcuffs

Answer

He felt stuck in the job because of the golden handcuffs.


ℹ️ Other Useful Pages

👉 HR and Recruitment Idioms
👉 Business English Idioms List
👉 Student Space
👉 Tutor Toolkit


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