«
The evidence for economic reform to date is scant and based on purported private statements rather than government pronouncements,» wrote Bruce Klingner, a research fellow at the Heritage Foundation and former CIA official, in an October op - ed for the Los Angeles Times.
Not exact matches
If Congress started to
evidence real progress on tax
reform,
economic expectations would likely rebound along with investor's preference
for value.
In the meantime, to those Tom Harris charcaters in the Labour party who want to present electoral
reform as an issue of relevance only to bourgeois liberal Guardian - readers (like me), I say: how dare you oppose a system that — on the
evidence of Soskice and Iversen's study — is better
for social spending and
economic equality?
Much has already been written about the different options
for selecting citizens to serve on a convention so that it is representative of all parts of the UK, and of gender, age, socio -
economic background, ethnic minorities, disabled people etc (see Alan Renwick's pamphlet and the Electoral
Reform Society
evidence).
Others have called
for evidence - based
economic interventions such as freight - subsidies, cross-subsidisation of healthy food and «fat taxes» to be trialed, or point to great potential in welfare
reform and income management programs.