Not exact matches
Although one could imagine all sorts of
radical Blue Sky tax
reforms — or much
less radical ideas like a carbon tax or a value added tax — in the context of the current debate about how to make some alterations to the current tax system, I would suggest the following five elements in the spirit of 1986:
Business and consumer surveys broadly continued to suggest the post-election bounce in sentiment was intact, despite signs some policy initiatives from the Trump administration — including key tax and health care
reforms — might take longer to implement, and in some cases be
less radical, than earlier indications.
Most needed, given an analysis of this kind, is moral tutelage that encourages people to be
less greedy (or to reassert traditional gender roles), not
radical reform of the economic system itself.
With this rising population and the lack of
radical reform in most underdeveloped countries, particularly in the rural communities where the large masses of these people live, the world food crisis will recur when again the crops are
less favorable; the danger is that it will then gradually take on an ever more permanent and disastrous dimension.
Professionals working in the public services, battered by constant upheavals, find the rhetoric of apparently endless «
radical reform» even
less appealing.
In August, the prime minister unveiled a package of
reforms which were considerably
less radical - and
less similar to Ed Miliband's - than she had those previously proposed.
Where I come out — you can read more in «The End of the Education Debate» — is that America needs not
less education
reform but far more fundamental and
radical reform.