Bureaucrats
in sentence
333 examples of Bureaucrats in a sentence
For starters, policymakers can improve the investment climate by making laws clearer, taxes simpler, courts faster, and
bureaucrats
cleaner.
The first reform to be enacted is a big cut in the number and income of national and regional politicians and of top civilian and military bureaucrats, who in many cases are the best paid in the world.
The regime depended on show trials and gulag labor, and used unprecedented violence to consolidate the power of dogmatic, ascetic
bureaucrats.
His approach – to convince bureaucrats, opposition-party leaders, and the general public to support gradual reform – may seem to reflect cautious conservative timidity, but it has enabled the long-term success of his government’s measures.
Learning from Bill GatesNEW YORK – Everyone – from elected officials and
bureaucrats
to voters and taxpayers – can learn from the world’s largest charitable foundation about effective development spending.
But no, this is not the time for new Atlantic institutions; this is a time for patient bureaucrats, not for architects.
Corrupt bosses put to shame petty government
bureaucrats
who steal a measly few thousand dollars -- even a few million.
So it is unfortunate that America abandoned the Kyoto process for combating global warming, instead of trying to move that process toward sensible market-based solutions and away from the regulatory mechanism beloved of
bureaucrats
everywhere.
Bureaucrats
lament ministerial dithering.
When he devolved ministerial planning to
bureaucrats
in 2008, many were not pleased.
Second, Chinese aid does not require pre-project “missions” by
bureaucrats
who arrive from distant headquarters for a sort of development tourism that wreaks havoc on the routines of the local counterparts who must accompany them on their poverty excursions.
In fact, British voters mostly support free movement, if it is presented not as an anti-democratic imposition by foreign bureaucrats, but rather as a right that British and EU citizens reciprocally enjoy.
Chinese citizens cannot vote, but they can – and do – make their displeasure known, which places a premium on what Chinese
bureaucrats
call “stability maintenance.”
The Stability Pact is too crude and technocratic: a 3% deficit target enforced by Brussels
bureaucrats
cannot bind real-life politicians.
We economists supposedly failed to convey to politicians and
bureaucrats
what needed to be done, because we hadn’t analyzed the situation fully and properly in real time.
The
bureaucrats
around me had to learn that.
He maintained Russia's Central Bank as a bureaucratic and murky monster of 80,000
bureaucrats
(America's Fed, by contrast, has only 10,000 employees).
Politicians representing these voters lack experience in government, sometimes are technically unprepared for governance, and are suspicious of technocrats and bureaucrats, particularly those in Brussels.
This constituency could grow dramatically if democrats and economic reformers focused renewed energy on the need for honesty and fairness in government; on an enhanced social safety net financed by higher taxation of natural resource enterprises; and on further market reforms aimed at separating the economy from the grasping hands of politicians and
bureaucrats.
In India, where government is more often considered a drag on commerce than a catalyst of growth, the decisions that move local markets are now more likely to come from
bureaucrats
in Delhi than from innovators in Mumbai.
This means that left-wing populists are inevitably compelled to compete with right-wing populists for the support of exactly the same groups that turned to fascism between the wars: young unemployed males, the “small man” who feels threatened by the “oligarchy” of bankers, global supply chains, corrupt politicians, remote European Union bureaucrats, and “fat cats” of all kinds.
In the meantime, even if the referendum is held and eventually lost under the combined onslaught of bureaucrats, politicians and union bosses, the modernization revolution is alive.
How that money is spent needs to be carefully planned, so that it enhances the long-term prospects of the displaced, rather than being siphoned off by corrupt politicians and
bureaucrats.
He promised "20,000 fewer bureaucrats, 20,000 extra police."
At first, reform of the state incited hostility among both
bureaucrats
and ordinary citizens.
Given the differing views of President Dmitri Medvedev and former President and current Prime Minister Vladimir Putin – the main candidates in next year’s presidential election – many Russian
bureaucrats
prefer to avoid offering bold initiatives regarding BMD or other strategic arms-control issues until they know who the next president will be.
Shortly after the Leave camp labeled
bureaucrats
in her Her Majesty’s Civil Service “enemies of the people” – a typical statement in the early stages of a revolution – pro-Brexit Foreign Trade Minister Liam Fox derided British exporters, calling them “too lazy and too fat” to succeed in his brave new free-trading Britain.
Some people in Russia--traditional leftists and corrupt
bureaucrats
afraid of a more open system--indulge in anti-American rhetoric.
Crippling economic austerity, imposed by unelected
bureaucrats
in Brussels and Washington, is not only a social calamity; it is also poses a dangerous threat to democracy.
Otherwise, they compete to become
bureaucrats
at the most influential ministries – for example, finance, economy, or foreign affairs – or they try to get on the fast track to the top of elite firms like Toyota or Sony.
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