Not exact matches
Whatever your thoughts about ghana's education are we are based on the much
better British system
rather than your hollow American one hence with only a tiny proportion graduating your government seeks to employ them in your
public services.
But he has also made clear that there will be no backing down from this position, saying that stronger economic growth,
rather than higher taxes or borrowing, is the way to deliver
better public services and higher real wages.
The Telegraph's Philip Johnston applauds the reduction in
public sector jobs: «Removing many back office staff is a
good thing because it becomes necessary to deal with people directly
rather than split the functions of a
service... The fact is that the
public sector employs 800,000 more people than in 1997, many of them engaged in developing specifications, writing guidance, drawing up standards, devising targets, enforcing inspections — all in the name of a reform programme that does not work properly.
«And as long as we have useful tools who purport to be Republicans, like Dean Skelos, Bob Turner, and a swath of other who are not willing to stand up for principles, but who would
rather knuckle under to the most extreme demands of far - left Democrats,
Public Service Unions and
well - funded special interests in exchange for job security, and who could not lead a one - car funeral on an abandoned stretch of the Thruway, idiots like me — Andrew Cuomo — will continue to roll over the legislature, the taxpayers, the bondholders, and the rest of New York's victims with nary so much as an objection.»
Rather than educate the
best and brightest for placement into top universities and success in work and
public service, Dunbar became a standard comprehensive high school that educated everyone residentially zoned to attend it.
When our state education officials impose an educational program that does nothing to develop our children's intellectual abilities, intentionally mislead parents about what the law on testing permits, then waste scarce taxpayer dollars, not on educational
services, but
rather on a media blitz to further snow the
public, we know that they do not have the
best educational interests of our children in mind.
This in turn was accepted by the 2004 white paper Transforming
Public Services: complaints, redress and tribunals which supported the balance and expertise multi-member panels can bring and considered that a principal reason for aligning employment tribunals with other tribunals
rather than courts was that this was the
best way of preserving maximum informality and accessibility.
For policymakers the goal should not be deregulation for its own sake, but
rather increasing access to legal
services that the
public can trust delivered by legal
service providers who are part of a larger legal community that sees furthering the
public good as a fundamental commitment.
It is not reliant on trade deals, relationships between countries, or
services, but can be impacted by political changes — such as when reports emerged that South Korea was considering a full ban — as
well as cybersecurity disasters and the
public perception of value,
rather than a coin's technical merits.
(Same goes for other
services like lawyers, accountants etc.) More often then not the true specialist in those fields charge what they are worth
rather than what the
public expects and yet most people pay up to receive the
best advice they can, because in the long run it always pays for itself with higher sales prices and
better exposure.