Sentence examples for mixture of reforms from inspiring English sources

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(Fearing inflation, locals have been piling into gold rather than shares).If the stockmarket rally is best explained by a mixture of reforms, a PR blitz by the government and a global liquidity surge, what are the prospects for shares now?

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What you have here in Indonesia is a mixture of the old and new governments, a mixture of reform and nonreform forces.

In countries like Iran and Saudi Arabia, it means supporting reform, and perhaps ultimately what I have called refolution, that is, the mixture of reform from above and people's power from below that triumphed in Poland and Hungary in 1989.

Mr Mbeki will then, with the help of Mr Blair, present the plan to the G8 summit in Genoa the following week.The plan's central thesis is that Africa's development depends on its full involvement in the global economy, and that this requires a mixture of reform in Africa and assistance from other countries.

The "Chinese dream" of Xi Jinping, the new president, is a mixture of economic reform and strident nationalism.

The outcome of the negotiations between Greece and the other eurozone member states, he said, did "not make sense in economic terms because of the toxic mixture of necessary structural reforms of state and economy with further neoliberal impositions that will completely discourage an exhausted Greek population and kill any impetus to growth".

Secondly, the outcome does not make sense in economic terms because of the toxic mixture of necessary structural reforms of state and economy with further neoliberal impositions that will completely discourage an exhausted Greek population and kill any impetus to growth.

The head of France's ruling UMP party emerged as the most popular rightwing politician in 30 years after promising to shake France out of its decline with a mixture of free-market reforms, and to restore "authority" with tough law and order measures, clamp down on immigration and instil a sense of "national pride".

You may think that Margaret Thatcher had achieved much in rescuing her country from decades of decline, but apparently not: Britain had become a divided, squalid, appallingly unequal society which badly needed a mixture of socialism, constitutional reform and the admirably long-termist, "stakeholder" capitalism of Germany and Japan.

A mixture of repression and partial reforms headed off the protest movement, but by then the opposition was a visible and growing presence, including a small armed left which, in the shape of the communist-led Manuel Rodriguez Patriotic Front, narrowly missed assassinating the General in September 1986.

Unlike the Apostolic Tradition, the canons do not seem to describe an actual Christian community but instead contain a mixture of apostolic fiction, ideal reform, and actual practice.

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