Bureaucrats
in sentence
333 examples of Bureaucrats in a sentence
The main lesson seems to be that natural abundance may support democracy and development only when they are not in the hands of
bureaucrats
or caudillos.
The market coordinates, not the
bureaucrats
of Brussels.
The only thing for which Europe has a need is more freedom of the market and more competition, not more European
bureaucrats
and another level of government superimposed over national, regional, and local governments.
Before the “Great Successor” was married, he looked like a young boy, sandwiched between generals, bureaucrats, and family members.
Turkey’s bureaucrats, politicians, and citizens united to fulfill the Copenhagen criteria for EU membership and tolerated the pain of the IMF-directed structural-adjustment programs.
Japan’s powerful bureaucrats, nostalgic for the 1960’s model of development, whereby government and its business cronies nurtured the Japanese miracle, strongly opposed this bold, free-market solution.
A number of practical steps are needed:-- the number of
bureaucrats
must be reduced to a bare minimum.
Estonia, Georgia and Kazakhstan have achieved this end;-- regulatory legislation which invites grotesque state intrusion in the market must be abolished;-- the power of
bureaucrats
must be severely check by all legal and administrative means.
According to the World Bank’s “Investment Climate Surveys”, 27% of nearly 4,000 firms doing business in China in 2002-03 described corruption as a “major constraint” on their commercial operations, while 55% reported that they had paid bribes to government
bureaucrats
and/or local business partners to get things done.
However, since these petty bureaucrats’ power is almost absolute, they also control the channels for addressing grievances.
Many of the newly elected members, moreover, are veteran Fatah
bureaucrats.
Avoiding embarrassment may at times be in the national interest, but it can also protect the careers of politicians and
bureaucrats.
They recognize inequality as a problem, and in principle they support government policies that provide high-quality education and health-care services, but they do not trust politicians or
bureaucrats.
I support Geithner’s plan to cooperate with private investors in dealing with the banks’ toxic assets, because they make better business decisions than government
bureaucrats.
Because the bureaucracy tightly controlled banks and allocated credit, for example, chaebols expanded investment by cultivating good relations with
bureaucrats
and bankers.
Meanwhile, Italy’s top
bureaucrats
are the highest paid in history, according to OECD data, with several retired officials drawing larger pensions than former US presidents receive.
Third, industrial policy’s practitioners need to bear in mind that it aims to serve society at large, not the
bureaucrats
who administer it or the businesses that receive the incentives.
In general, the best government interventions target failures precisely – using cap and trade to put a price on air pollution, for example, or relying on the individual mandate to curtail adverse selection in health insurance – while letting market forces do the rest more efficiently than
bureaucrats
can.
In October 2001, a half-dozen
bureaucrats
were expelled from one of China's major cities for not meeting their economic growth and security targets.
Instead, China's highest officials publicly insist that they run the most centrally controlled government in the world, with full authority to appoint or dismiss mayors, governments, and
bureaucrats.
But it is not out of place to remind ourselves that economists and
bureaucrats
need not always have things their own way.
Brazil’s Economic DeliveranceWASHINGTON, DC – Ongoing corruption investigations in Brazil have exposed a tangled network of illicit relationships between private firms, government bureaucrats, and elected politicians.
Like bureaucrats, professional politicians have mastered the art of saying nothing interesting in public.
Berlusconi was replaced by a government run by elite technocrats, whose policies had to be approved by European bankers and European Union
bureaucrats.
Neoliberal economic policies, predicated on well-functioning markets, misfired in developing countries – just as planning models, presuming competent and capable bureaucrats, failed in an earlier era.
After all, although modern market economics provides a sound framework for policymaking – as Chinese
bureaucrats
are eagerly learning – the idea of a planned economy emerged in the nineteenth century as a counter-orthodoxy to address market failures.
A few decades ago, it was Japan that thought it was going to be Number One, and its businessmen, politicians, and
bureaucrats
were not shy about letting the rest of the world know.
Deregulation ("debureaucratization," really) will make life easier for new businesses by reducing the number of inspections imposed by
bureaucrats
and by decreasing the number of demands for licenses and other forms of red tape (which were also big sources of bribery).
It also made the Privy Council the guardian of Aritomo's edicts concerning examinations, appointments, discipline, dismissal, and rankings of
bureaucrats.
The Meiji political system and the
bureaucrats
survived the postwar purges and the imposition of an American-drafted constitution.
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