Sentence examples for aim of reforms from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

The ultimate aim of reforms, says Mr Sinn, is to lower prices in the south of the euro zone relative to those in the north, so as to reflect lower productivity.

Similar(58)

The first aim of reform was to get people into jobs; the second was to improve the income of the poor.

The immediate aim of reform was to restore the land to its legal owners, settle the title, and use public land to reconstruct Indian villages.

Similarly, the goals of the PKS, as defined by Mr Zulkieflimansyah, are "the reform of the Islamic community", and the aim of reform is "prosperity and justice", roughly the PKS's name.

And with the UK due to assume chairmanship of the Council of Europe (of which the ECtHR is a part) later this year, the government's stated aim of reform from within looks realistic.

Earlier this year, Prime Minister Theresa May ordered a crackdown on individuals' and companies' use of offshore tax havens – many sited in British overseas territories – as part of her stated aim of "reforming capitalism" after the BHS scandal.

The aim of reform must be a political system congruent with the philosophy of a post-bureaucratic age, whose watchword is fluidity and whose leitmotif is the sovereignty of the people – the only sure foundations for a new British constitution.

The European Union's democracy and human rights instrument, which I established in 1992 with the aim of reforming the Soviet bloc, should be redirected towards "difficult" countries such as China, Russia and Iran during 2008.

"We support the government's aim of reforming the welfare benefits system to make it simpler and fairer, but these changes are neither simple nor fair, and will hit the most vulnerable hardest.

They should stand firm.As well as being battered in the local elections on May 5th, Mr Clegg's party saw its cherished aim of reforming the Westminster voting system thumpingly rejected in a referendum.

Britain's, and perhaps the world's, greatest medical editor, Thomas Wakley, founded the Lancet with the primary aim of reform, and in wildly intemperate language he attacked nepotism, incompetence, quackery and corruption, all of which were rife in early 19th-century British medicine (and perhaps still are).

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