English to Punjabi Dictionary disincentive

disincentive

ਨਿਰਾਸ਼ਾ
definition
noun
spiraling house prices are beginning to act as a disincentive to development
a factor, especially a financial disadvantage, that tends to discourage people from doing something.
example
spiraling house prices are beginning to act as a 'disincentive' to development
With appropriate training and support, many of these people could be provided with pathways out of the poverty traps that currently act as 'disincentives' to finding work.
So we will keep on working to break down barriers and 'disincentives' to trade and investment.
For general practitioners, government legislation imposes financial 'disincentives' for non-compliance in that college's professional development programme.
In public healthcare systems, physicians are often salaried employees with compensation plans that may act as 'disincentives' for innovation.
A precondition for sustainability over the long run in India is to curb our burgeoning population through incentives and 'disincentives' .
It says the UK tax regime ‘should be reformed to remove the financial 'disincentives' in Scotland to growing a business beyond a certain level’.
An essential ingredient of their success has been that their parents, a physicist and an educator, helped them to negotiate 'disincentives' and obstacles along the way.
There ought to be stiffer financial 'disincentives' to owning multiple properties.
This close link between contributions and benefits is designed to discourage evasion and labor 'disincentives' .
Many lecturers, faced with such discouragement and manifest 'disincentives' , succumb to the pressure and base their assessment of students solely on tasks such as essays.
If it is thought, perhaps, that couples face financial 'disincentives' to marry, then fiscal policy might be used to encourage them to marry, or remain married.
Does the report reveal what the 'disincentives' and obstacles may be?
Incentives need to be reinforced by 'disincentives' that discourage damaging actions.
There will be more financial barriers and 'disincentives' to accessible care.
Along with the profound political differences, these beliefs provide 'disincentives' to negotiate and make the serious trade-offs required to end the civil war.
Primary care physicians may also lack sufficient training and face financial 'disincentives' to perform psychodiagnostic testing.
The state has various 'disincentives' to curbing these practices.
Not that such 'disincentives' dissuade the smart set from guzzling foreign brands.
Recent government regulations in the United States have provided financial 'disincentives' to discourage the ordering of chemistry panels that contain calcium.
However, 'disincentives' are the classic method this society uses to discourage anti-social behavior.
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