Reforms
in sentence
4494 examples of Reforms in a sentence
There are also financial
reforms
in rural China.
And my own view is the country is going to face some substantial challenges, because they have not moved further and faster on political
reforms.
A little-known fact about India in the 1990s is that the country not only has undertaken economic reforms, the country has also undertaken political
reforms
by introducing village self-rule, privatization of media and introducing freedom of information acts.
India has the right institutional conditions for economic growth, whereas China is still struggling with political
reforms.
I believe that the political
reforms
are a must for China to maintain its growth.
And it's very important to have political reforms, to have widely shared benefits of economic growth.
Hopefully, five years from now, I'm going to report to TEDGlobal that political
reforms
will happen in China.
And with the support of a leader who was willing, at the time, to do the reforms, we put forward a comprehensive reform program, which we developed ourselves.
So all the changes and
reforms
we were able to make have shown up in results that are measurable in the economy.
And though young people from the Arab world were pretty successful in bringing down three dictators, shaking the region, kind of persuading the clever kings from Jordan and Morocco to do substantial reforms, it is yet to be seen what will be the outcome.
If you had caught me straight out of college in the halls of the Vermont State House where I was a lobbyist in training and asked me what I was going to do with my life, I would have told you that I'd just passed the Hanyu Shuiping Kaoshi, the Chinese equivalency exam, and I was going to go study law in Beijing, and I was going to improve U.S.-China relations through top-down policy changes and judicial system
reforms.
My initial work focused on Uganda, where I focused on negotiating
reforms
with the Finance Ministry of Uganda so they could access our loans.
There are dozens and dozens of
reforms
we can do that will make things better, because a lot of our dysfunction can be traced directly to things that Congress did to itself in the 1990s that created a much more polarized and dysfunctional institution.
These are two that I strongly recommend, and they list a whole bunch of
reforms.
So there are a lot of
reforms
we could do that will counteract this.
But the third class of
reforms
is that we've got to change the nature of social relationships in Congress.
And at times they have worked with the Southern Poverty Law Center to oppose the building of new prisons and to work for
reforms
that will make the justice system more efficient and more humane.
Some of those
reforms
have been good.
So I went to Brussels on a mission to make the case for a united European response, one that would calm the markets and give us the time to make the necessary
reforms.
And I'm not talking about the necessary
reforms
of the United Nations or the G20.
George Papandreou: Well, obviously there were constraints which didn't allow me or others to make the types of decisions we would have wanted, and obviously I had hoped that we would have the time to make the
reforms
which would have dealt with the deficit rather than trying to cut the deficit which was the symptom of the problem.
One thing we often hear is, "Political
reforms
have lagged far behind economic reforms," and "China is in dire need of political reform."
The truth is, political
reforms
have never stopped.
Now such changes are simply not possible without political
reforms
of the most fundamental kind.
And it seems to me that the
reforms
might have thrown the baby out with the bath water.
I think most of us would agree that in the 1990s, the greatest politician in the world was African, but I'm meeting brilliant people across the continent the entire time, and they're doing the
reforms
which have transformed the economic situation for their countries.
And many different
reforms
aim at holding back this growth.
It's important for you to know if the government of your country is able to manage a crisis, if the government is finally able to implement the
reforms
that it's promised.
They have produced crony capitalism, American-style, in which the largest financial institutions are the leading financial donors of both parties, and that's the reason why even after this crisis, 70 times larger than the savings and loan crisis, we have no meaningful
reforms
in any of the three areas that I've talked about, other than banning liar's loans, which is good, but that's just one form of ammunition for this fraud weapon.
These issues include female illiteracy, which is quite high in the region; educational reforms; programs for dropout students; and political activism among university students.
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