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escalation clause
(redirected from escalator clause)

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escalation clause

Clause that provides for an increase in the price of a contractor's goods and/or services under specified conditions. Common in contracts delivered over a long period of time, an escalation clause protects the contractor against a general rise in costs especially in a climate of high inflation. The formula used for determining the increase in price is often predetermined and written in to the contract.



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25 percent raises each year for five years, and an escalator clause to account for inflation.
AFBF convention delegates voted that future farm supports should contain "an energy escalator clause because of the high prices of fuel and fertilizer.
Both sides seemed to agree that the Eighth Amendment was written with what Yale Law Professor Akhil Reed Amar calls a built-in escalator clause.
 
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