disincentive

disincentive
disincentive dis‧in‧cen‧tive [ˌdɪsɪnˈsentɪv] noun [countable] HUMAN RESOURCES
something that makes people less willing to do something:
disincentive to

• High interest rates are a disincentive to expanding a business.

disincentive for

• The present government policies provide serious disincentives for employment.

* * *

disincentive UK US /ˌdɪsɪnˈsentɪv/ US  /-ṱɪv/ noun [C]
something that makes a person or organization less willing to do something: »

A culture of corruption is a disincentive to investment and trade.

serve as/act as a disincentive »

High severance costs can act as a disincentive to hire new workers.

a disincentive (for sb) to do sth »

The tax on large pensions could be a disincentive to save for retirement.

a disincentive to doing sth »

Working on a fixed-fee basis is a disincentive to agreeing to act for certain clients.

»

a major/strong/powerful disincentive

create/provide a disincentive »

Prices send signals to producers telling them what to supply, while taxes create disincentives.


Financial and business terms. 2012.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • disincentive — I noun averseness, check, constraint, curb, damper, determent, deterrence, deterrent, discouragement, disinclination, dissuasion, hindrance, indisposition, lack of allurement, lack of charm, lack of desire, lack of enticement, lack of impetus,… …   Law dictionary

  • disincentive — (n.) 1946; see DIS (Cf. dis ) + INCENTIVE (Cf. incentive) (n.) …   Etymology dictionary

  • disincentive — ► NOUN ▪ a factor that discourages a particular action …   English terms dictionary

  • disincentive — [dis΄in sen′tiv] n. a thing or factor that keeps one from doing something; deterrent …   English World dictionary

  • disincentive — dis|in|cen|tive [ˌdısınˈsentıv] n something that makes people less willing to do something ≠ ↑incentive disincentive to (doing/do) sth ▪ High interest rates can be a disincentive to expanding a business …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • disincentive — [[t]dɪ̱sɪnse̱ntɪv[/t]] disincentives N VAR: oft N to n/ ing, N to inf A disincentive is something which discourages people from behaving or acting in a particular way. [FORMAL] High marginal tax rates may act as a disincentive to working longer… …   English dictionary

  • disincentive — UK [ˌdɪsɪnˈsentɪv] / US noun [countable] Word forms disincentive : singular disincentive plural disincentives something that makes you not want to do something …   English dictionary

  • disincentive — noun (C) something that tries to stop people from doing something (+ to): The biggest disincentive to spend is the fear of debt …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • disincentive — noun high interest rates are a disincentive to investment Syn: deterrent, discouragement, damper, brake, curb, check, restraint, inhibitor; obstacle, impediment, hindrance, obstruction, block, barrier …   Thesaurus of popular words

  • disincentive — /ˌdɪsɪnˈsɛntɪv/ (say .disin sentiv) noun 1. anything that deters from action, etc.: *recent reports suggest the Sydney 2000 Olympics may in fact be acting as a disincentive to international travel to Australia –aap news, 2000. –adjective 2.… …  

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