Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

48 Sentences With "disincentivized"

How to use disincentivized in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "disincentivized" and check conjugation/comparative form for "disincentivized". Mastering all the usages of "disincentivized" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Doctors and researchers work in silos and are disincentivized to collaborate.
Employers would be disincentivized to hired undocumented workers and the flow of workers would wane.
But it is this cognitive effort that is actively disincentivized in our current health-care system.
In 0003, they canceled the project after hearing from staff that it disincentivized participants from finding work.
There are many people across the country who are unwilling, unable or are otherwise disincentivized to call 85033.
To be fair, these methods of depriving workers of hours can still be described as "voluntary," if heavily disincentivized.
However, it has increased revenues, brought back corporate earnings from overseas, disincentivized offshoring of jobs, and boosted our economy.
The Ontario government said it canceled the program after hearing from staff that it disincentivized participants from finding work.
Ultimately, the attempted implementation of socialism proved an abject failure as state planning over the economy disincentivized entrepreneurship, innovation and competition.
Costs for linespace, a spot market created to trade capacity on the congested pipeline, have also disincentivized shipment on Colonial, sources said.
Because tax-exempt municipal bonds are frequently used for small-scale infrastructure projects, and banks are now disincentivized from buying tax-exempt municipal bonds.
However, individuals with Down syndrome are disincentivized from pursuing meaningful careers because of the fear of losing access to life saving benefits like Medicaid.
CNN's Romans says a common opposition to a cash handouts is that it would create a "nanny state," where individuals are disincentivized to work.
Smart recommendations are the kind of thing that traditional brokerages aren't really able to offer, and are in some ways they're even disincentivized to try.
Unsurprisingly, I also spent a lot of time thinking about out how each of them disincentivized inaction, encouraging players to break through stagnation draw games.
And now your users are not only disincentivized to venture beyond their own circles, they are also functionally hindered by your algorithm from indulging their curiosity.
These ill-advised actions — especially the Security Council resolution — have disincentivized the Palestinian leadership from accepting Netanyahu's offer to sit down and negotiation a compromise peace.
The Drug Enforcement Agency, for instance, had the opportunity to reschedule cannabis in 2016, which could have drastically disincentivized the prosecution of cannabis retailers, growers and users.
Therefore, U.S. manufacturers will be disincentivized to manufacture in the U.S. and will move their plants to other countries that have no import or border adjustment taxes.
Arguably, the federal government is disincentivized to even nudge localities to take serious measures at this point, because that nudge would implicitly criticize its own foot-dragging.
"We were disincentivized from actually encouraging anyone to create a fundraiser on Facebook, because we had to give up more of the donations to processing fees," Hubley said.
Activists have argued the public charge rule would especially hurt American citizen children of immigrants without legal status, as their parents would be disincentivized from using social programs.
In other words, if VW just issues a global, public data dump rather than feeding data to the DOJ directly, the DOJ is disincentivized to cut Volkswagen some slack.
But, as we all know, anecdotally, at least, it's hard to imagine violent or horny people being disincentivized by taxes when they are in the throes of hardcore drinking.
Many of the systemic socialists in the West turned to various forms of social democracy and welfarism after finally realizing that state economic planning disincentivized entrepreneurship, innovation and modernization.
The EPA argued that the "once in, always in" standard disincentivized companies from reducing pollution and targeted it as part of the Trump administration's overarching goal of cutting regulatory burdens.
A key rationale: net neutrality has disincentivized broadband companies from investing in internet infrastructure, exacerbating the "digital divide" in America between poorer rural areas and better-connected suburbs and cities.
Many argue that America has few professional critics left, which means that most of the criticism is being done by freelancers who lack institutional protection and therefore are disincentivized from making sharp critiques.
By making the distribution curve look like the graph below where distribution declines as content gets more sensational, people are disincentivized from creating provocative content that is as close to the line as possible.
These women, who according to his book are disproportionately African American, their poor children should not get as much federal support when they are born, so they are disincentivized to have as many children.
" Be smart ... Frank Lavin, former Singapore ambassador under George W. Bush and former National Security Council summit organizer, tells me: "The more the Trump administration celebrates any success, the more North Korea is disincentivized from actually delivering.
Beloved characters dying is a downer, and an audience that truly believes their newest favorite character may be gone for good is an audience that could be disincentivized to check out the next Avengers installment when it rolls around.
The main reason is that I was raised using Windows, so I was disincentivized to learn the quirks of a new OS. As I grew older, however, I also found Apple's "walled-garden" approach to its device ecosystem infuriating.
It's pretty rare for total giving to decline, and lots of experts think the recent tax changes may have disincentivized charitable giving by doubling the standard deduction, therefore removing some of the tax write-off that people can claim with charity.
If people are disincentivized to work because of a guaranteed handout from the government, there will be fewer people available to actually pay the tens of billions of dollars in new taxes it would take to fund this new entitlement Yang envisions.
"If this populist economic model, in which everything supposedly belongs to and comes from the state, and in which people are given things without working for them, ends up being imposed on Mexico, investment will be disincentivized, seriously affecting jobs and the economy," it said.
But daily or upon-entry tourist taxes we've seen so far haven't come close to offsetting the lost revenue from disincentivized tourists, who at the start of 2017 spent all-in nearly $700 per day in the US on transportation, souvenirs and other expenses according to the U.S. National Travel and Tourism Office.
And music blogging, well... I have a lot of thoughts on that, but suffice it to say that social media disincentivized publishing the type of deliberate, unsensational writing that mirrors how we might want to think about music at our own pace in favor of a constant churn that is easy to talk about.
In cases of inadequate budgets, fertilizer was rationed, barring farmers from accessing sufficient amounts to apply to their crops. Finally, below market-level pricing disincentivized and displaced private distributors of fertilizer who no longer found it economically feasible to compete with subsidized fertilizer. This seriously jeopardized the financial sustainability of the programs.
Some opponents argue that larger, multi-seat districts would require more campaign funds to reach the voters. Proponents argue that STV can lower campaign costs because like-minded candidates can share some expenses. Proponents reason that negative advertising is disincentivized in such a system, as its effect is diluted among a larger pool of candidates. In addition, unlike in at-large plurality elections, candidates do not have to secure the support of at least 50% of voters, allowing candidates to focus campaign spending primarily on supportive voters.
This is not ideal, as early detection and subsequent management significantly increases the chances of full recovery. It has been found that seeking help is disincentivized when students are not aware of the options available. Therefore, post-secondary institutions have a responsibility to reach out to students, provide tailored feedback on potential symptoms, aid in creating suggestions for future goals, and facilitate the recovery process. Post-secondary campuses in North America already provide accessibility to some programs that are both feasible to deliver and facilitate comprehensive screening.
The coup leaders named their administration the Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces, with Velasco at its helm as President. Velasco's administration articulated a desire to give justice to the poor through a regime of nationalization known as Peruanismo. Velasco's rule was characterized by left-leaning policies, which aimed to create a strong national industry to increase the international independence of Peru. To that end, he nationalised entire industries, expropriated companies in a wide range of activities from fisheries to mining to telecommunications to power production and consolidated them into single industry-centric government-run entities (PescaPeru, MineroPeru, Petroperú, SiderPeru,Centromin Peru, ElectroPeru, Enapu, EnatruPeru, Enafer, Compañia Peruana de Telefonos, EntelPeru, Correos del Peru, etc.), and increased government control over economic activity by enforcing those entities as monopolies and disincentivized private activity in those sectors.
In it, the authors express great concern for the state of the teaching profession in the USA because their analyses revealed that academically talented college graduates tended to avoid teaching as a career and, even among those who entered the profession, the most talented quit early, especially in the scientific fields. They argued that current teacher licensing and certification policies stifled innovation and disincentivized entry into teaching at the outset. However, they also argued that, with appropriate incentives, these trends could be ameliorated and possibly reversed. In addition to improved salaries, the authors supported the widening of alternative paths into the teaching profession, improving school-district recruiting strategies and focusing on the teaching skills of candidates for entry into the teaching profession rather than simply on their prior academic success.
" The point here is to highlight the idea that the general was the brain of the army, whereas the soldiers were to behave as the limbs. Heroic individual actions were disincentivized in preference to complete obedience and perfect coordination as a unit, a concept which the Wei Liaozi elucidates upon in another parable concerning Wu Qi: Prior to the beginning of a battle, one of Wu's soldiers broke from his ranks in his enthusiasm and charged the enemy line, slaying two men, and trotted back to his former position along with their heads as trophies. Wu immediately ordered the man to be put to death. When his officers protested that he was a fine warrior, Wu Qi answered, "He is indeed a fine warrior, but he disobeyed my orders.
The coup leaders named their administration the Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces, with Velasco at its helm as President. Velasco's administration articulated a desire to give justice to the poor through a regime of nationalization known as Peruanismo. Velasco's rule was characterized by left- leaning policies, which aimed to create a strong national industry to increase the international independence of Peru. To that end, he nationalised entire industries, expropriated companies in a wide range of activities from fisheries to mining to telecommunications to power production and consolidated them into single industry-centric government-run entities (PescaPeru, MineroPeru, Petroperú, SiderPeru,Centromin Peru, ElectroPeru, Enapu, EnatruPeru, Enafer, Compañia Peruana de Telefonos, EntelPeru, Correos del Peru, etc.), and increased government control over economic activity by enforcing those entities as monopolies and disincentivized private activity in those sectors.
Their findings were that restructuring of the manufacturing sector increased competition for employment opportunities with white workers and also had the effect of reducing the cost of employment discrimination against black men. This meant that black workers accessed employment at a lower rate. Furthermore, although growth in female high wage employment was observed, this was primarily to the benefit of white women rather than their black counterparts leading to a convergence of white women with white men in the labor markets. According to Williams and Badgett this was likely because of white women's perceived 'kinship' and proximity to likeness in appearance making them more palatable in the workforce, a social behaviour with economic effects, and also due to white women's increased share of the labour force which disincentivized their discrimination due to increasing costs of discrimination.
This amounts to destroying forests the size of Delaware every two years. The fact that the rate of deforestation has remained constant over more than twenty years is misleading as one might believe that government or non-government organizations (NGO) interventions have been responsible for the decline, but reports indicate otherwise. Three reasons have been postulated as to why deforestation rates had remained relatively low: 1) the road network within the country has been gradually in decline making access to more remote areas more difficult, 2) political and regulatory changes have disincentivized investment in the country, and 3) agriculture has expanded outside of forest areas. Additionally, while the rates remained constant, wood removal (measured in cubic meters) continues to dramatically increase annually. Industrialized roundwood has increased from 3.05 million cubic meters in 1990 to 4.45 million cubic meters in 2010; fuelwood has increased from 44.2 million cubic meters to 75.44 million cubic meters annually in that same time.
A two-party system often develops in a plurality voting system. In this system, voters have a single vote, which they can cast for a single candidate in their district, in which only one legislative seat is available. In plurality voting (also referred to as first past the post), in which the winner of the seat is determined purely by the candidate with the most votes, several characteristics can serve to discourage the development of third parties and reward the two major parties. Duverger argued that there were two mechanisms whereby plurality voting systems lead to fewer major parties: (i) small parties are disincentivized to form because they have great difficulty winning seats or representation, and (ii) voters are wary of voting for a smaller party whose policies they actually favor because they do not want to "waste" their votes (on a party unlikely to win a plurality) and therefore tend to gravitate to one of two major parties that is more likely to achieve a plurality, win the election, and implement policy.

No results under this filter, show 48 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.