To "provoke a decision" means to stimulate or incite someone to make a choice or judgment about a particular issue or situation. This often involves presenting compelling arguments, evidence, or circumstances that challenge an individual's current stance or inaction. The intent is to encourage a response or action that may not have occurred without such provocation.
You have to make a decision to not make a decision. It means what it means.The phrase indicates that failing to change the status quo is also a decision, when either choice would change that condition or the circumstances under which it would be considered. For example : if the choice is to buy white socks or blue socks, failing to decide means you have no new socks of any color. In many cases, it could mean that the decision (or change) will be made by another person or event.
Macroeconomic is a branch of economic dealing with the performance structure behavior and decision making of whole economy
Thinking about the costs and benefits of making changes in behavior. when you make a decision, most people think on the margin, meaning they think about the positive and negative benefits of making one decision rather than another.
An individual decision is a decision that was made by one person. A group decision is a decision that was crafted by multiple people.
a decision that depends on the economy that is currently in place. the decision must depend on the economy of the time that the decision is made.
To provoke
to provoke
To provoke
It means to make something happen by angering someone else, such as--> He may punch you if you provoke him with name calling.
provoke
Provoke in Latin is either Provocare or Vocare. When I looked at etymonline.com, provoke gave me a connection to Voice. Voice is vocare in Latin. I thought, do Provoke and Voice have anything in common? I found out that Vocare mean "to call" Do they have anything in common? What does provoke have to do with to call?a friend of mine said: maybe you can get provoked by having someone call you? I don't know!
Taunt, tease, or provoke
What do you mean by decision-making
Provoke
To anger someone means to provoke them to anger or make them mad.
Provoking someone is annoying them or making them angry in some way.
Provoke, encourage, activate etc, generally a positive effect