猶太阿拉伯文翻譯語言翻譯公司

▲圖/翻攝自中國郵報

"Other young civil servants wanted a more radical approach: a clear division along generational lines to pursue reform objectives. But our viewpoint is different: a country's pension system is built on generations paying into it to support the next — so when we hear these opinions we have to take them into account and make adjustments accordingly," he said.

Members of the TCSIC have powered their message of questioning business as usual in the public sector through social media.

Politicians in the past balked at diffusing the crisis, aware their policy choices could very well blow up in their face.

He said that following a recording of a televised debate on a political commentary show, Lee Lai-hsi (李來希), a prominent critic of pension reform翻譯社 called him an idiot (Lin said he responded by calling Lee "very smart for having manipulated public opinion").

For him, it was a culture that was making the system unaccountable to the public, inefficient, unresponsive to social needs and at the mercy of political appointees. This desire by younger members of the civil service to reform from within gave way to the formation of the TCSIC.

量聯盟).

The challenge for those advocating reform has been building a consensus among civil servants

"Traditionally翻譯社 the only thing demanded of civil servants was that they follow orders. But we think that new modes of politics should be more bottom up in order to benefit the system as a whole. The TCSIC provides civil servants the space for policy discussions, skills training and a channel for voicing their opinions翻譯社" Lin told The China Post.

The Elephant in the Room

For Lin, however翻譯社 that process has been fraught with incidents of personal attacks.

A main area of contention has been the pace of which reforms are to take place. For example, Lin fears that the gradual pace proposed by the government may not translate into a sustainable system翻譯社 describing it as a temporary solution at best.

Just before the new government took power, Lin Yu-kai (林于凱), a young civil servant who had served for five years翻譯社 drafted an open letter to then-Premier-designate Lin Chuan.

He said he found it surprising how the "relatively well-educated civil servant cohort does not have the good judgment to stand up to fake news or rumors."

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