Reforms
in sentence
4494 examples of Reforms in a sentence
Given the process now underway, perhaps China's
reforms
are not so very different.
But although the language of China's incremental
reforms
always seems to be cautious, the results on the ground are radical.
In developing countries, legal
reforms
that give women equal rights in land ownership, inheritance, and access to credit are essential.
To make real progress toward reviving their economies, the individual countries need to depend less on quantitative easing by the ECB and focus squarely on structural
reforms
and fiscal stimulus.
The sense of being Europe’s economic superstar has generated policy inertia, bringing the country almost to a complete standstill on economic
reforms.
Poland is making its own direct contribution, above all by helping senior Burmese decision makers, opposition leaders, and business representatives to understand the “technology of transition” – that is, the sequencing of technical reforms, which has helped to make Poland one of Europe’s healthiest economies today.
She has introduced policies, programs, and institutional
reforms
designed to support government-to-society and society-to-society diplomacy, alongside traditional government-to-government relations.
Reassuring the markets by adopting structural reforms, he has observed, is properly the responsibility of those governments, not of the central bank.
But structural
reforms
cannot be accomplished overnight.
Italy needs time to put its pro-growth
reforms
in place.
Meanwhile, Italy, now under the watchful eye of the International Monetary Fund, needs to move ahead with those pro-growth
reforms
in order to reassure the ECB’s shareholders that the central bank’s bond purchases are not money losers.
Instead, he launched a series of
reforms
that stoked the resentment of the masses.
But no longer can we assume that anyone who opposes green
reforms
is a climate-change denier, and therefore greedy, an idiot, or both.
An important part of these
reforms
is to abolish jail time for non-fraudulent bankruptcies, which remains a real threat for owners of small businesses throughout the region.
Governments need to reassess this balance, and adopt
reforms
that unlock the potential of private businesses to grow and take on more employees.
In 2012 – two decades after the government launched a series of economic
reforms
aimed at opening up the economy – the official poverty rate had reached 22%, less than half the rate in 1994.
If economic growth remains on its current trajectory, with no major reforms, more than one-third of the population will remain below the empowerment line in 2022, with 12% still trapped in extreme poverty.
To avoid such an outcome, India’s government should pursue a set of bold
reforms
that boost growth by encouraging businesses to invest, scale up, and hire.
In Bahrain, the Shia who form 75% of the population have been keen on the
reforms
initiated by King Hamad Al-Khalifah.
For too long, government officials have tinkered with Mexico’s economic structure through piecemeal
reforms
that seek to ensure political stability, but that do not address the key obstacles to greater innovation and competitiveness.
In particular, the attempt to make expansionary policies conditional on the implementation of a host of microeconomic
reforms
is problematic.
France Stratégie, which advises the French government, and the American entrepreneur Nick Hanauer have proposed social-policy
reforms
that share a similar conceptual foundation.
At the World Economic Forum in Davos in January, Liu He, China’s new vice premier for economic policy, hinted that upcoming
reforms
would be carried out with surprising speed.
Liu, a master tactician, seems to be underscoring the link between leadership power and the pace of
reforms.
Initial allocations were modest; but, over time, their donations helped fund health-care
reforms
elsewhere in Africa.
But the authorities implemented far-reaching
reforms
in the early 1960s, and, over the next three decades, it became an industrial powerhouse with a standard of living that qualified it for membership in the OECD, the club of rich countries.
More broadly, Lutz Mez, a political scientist at Berlin’s Free University, argues that the country’s shift has “observably decoupled energy supply from economic growth,” and that the “evolving Energiewende, rather than the nuclear phase-out” implies “continuing
reforms
of social, economic, technological, and cultural policy in Germany.”
Few Israelis expect Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmud Abbas to deliver security to Israel, or to implement far reaching political and financial
reforms.
Similar problems are already appearing in South Korea, while China has been driven to loosen its one-child policy and unveil plans for economic
reforms
aimed at reviving growth.
Since the 1970s, economists have been advising policymakers to de-emphasize the public sector, physical capital, and infrastructure, and to prioritize private markets, human capital (skills and training), and
reforms
in governance and institutions.
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