What's the difference between incentivise and incentivize?

Incentivise


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Our last chance to restrain the housing bill is with the Lords | Bob Kerslake Read more The report goes on to argue that private housebuilders, as currently incentivised, are unable to deliver this target and calls for local authorities and housing associations to be freed up to build substantially more homes for rent and sale.
  • (2) It’s about incentivising a new balance between risk management and relational support by enabling social workers to do what they do at their best: to see and build on people’s strengths, head off problems before they become crises, show empathy, and offer creative and flexible support, focused on the long term.
  • (3) Meanwhile some residents feel that Norma 26 , a policy meant to incentivise the construction of much-needed low-income housing, is actually driving gentrification.
  • (4) It will also recommend ways to incentivise all parents to take up the offer of classes.
  • (5) A Department for Work and Pensions spokesman said: “Our welfare reforms are incentivising work and restoring fairness to the system, because we know that work is the best route out of poverty.
  • (6) But while May appeared to suggest she would seek guarantees, she will also have to deal with the question of the point at which new rules are enacted, and whether they could be set retrospectively to avoid incentivising a spike in immigration.
  • (7) But that tension – between producers incentivised to build their content business and broadcasters strapped to the wheel of maximising on-air performance – has proved impossible to resolve.
  • (8) He called for more imaginative ways to incentivise the pharmaceutical industry, for example through changes to patents, and for regulation around clinical trials to be eased.
  • (9) The task is made harder still because of the intense pressures from Centrica's shareholders to deliver extraordinarily high financial rates of return, made worse because the directors' team, rewarded in bonuses and options related to share-price performance, are strongly incentivised to focus only on the share price.
  • (10) Instead, the only approaches that this government knows are to deregulate and incentivise the private sector, in the belief that, ultimately, it will meet the city’s housing needs unaided.
  • (11) "Ofcom fears that as Sky develops its online services its market power could transfer to these new services and that it will be enabled and indeed incentivised to charge high prices," said Tony Ballard, a partner at law firm Harbottle & Lewis.
  • (12) He denied that: there is a fear factor ingrained into the whole culture of Sports Direct; that some shop workers are told they can be dismissed for three misdemeanours; that workers sometimes feel under pressure to mislead customers and the commission scheme only incentivises them to sell Sports Direct brands; that finish times on rotas are not adhered to; that there is inadequate training and that the company has been paying shop workers less than the legal minimum.
  • (13) The new plan cites funding for electric taxis and hydrogen vehicles that had already been announced and commits only to “exploring” vehicle tax changes to incentivise cleaner cars and lorries.
  • (14) Claire O’Rourke, the national director of Solar Citizens, said renewable energy was a cost-of-living issue, because incentivising household solar panels allowed people to reduce their electricity bill.
  • (15) We have a system at present that doesn’t incentivise politicians to do anything about migrants, so you see stereotypes like “migrants take jobs”, “migrants are terrorists”, “migrants are security risks”, “they are criminals”, “they bring illnesses”, all these stereotypes that have been demonstrated to be false by social science simply continue to be in the public discourse because no one is speaking up against them, neither the migrants nor we citizens.
  • (16) The problem is that these are no longer the harmless peccadilloes of the super-rich, presented as fundamental to incentivise performance.
  • (17) Doctors know that better care can cost less and we can use the tariff to incentivise better, more efficient care for patients."
  • (18) Palace’s offer is heavily incentivised and it also contains a break clause that would be triggered in the event of Adebayor breaching any of the club’s disciplinary rules.
  • (19) ¤ create a comprehensive affordable housing development programme to incentivise the creation of quality mixed use developments in high demand locations based upon the principles of high density development around strengthened transport nodes, using dedicated delivery vehicles such as Housing Regeneration Companies.
  • (20) Second, I would consider targeted tax cuts that are not too costly to the Treasury – for example cutting the 50% tax rate to 40% to incentivise entrepreneurial activity.

Incentivize


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Reasonable use” sounds … well, reasonable, but a “use it or lose it” clause incentivizes profligate use: if you don’t use your historic water allocation in a beneficial way, you forfeit your water rights, Gray said.
  • (2) We’re working to incentivize all Democrats who may run for president – including Clinton – to promote expanding Social Security benefits, making college debt-free, and breaking up the Wall Street banks that broke our economy,” said PCCC’s TJ Helmstetter.
  • (3) In keeping with Obama’s approach to use the promise of weapons to incentivize Baghdad to make favorable political choices, administration officials are also discussing backfilling any weaponry to the Kurds provided by Baghdad, considered a step toward mitigating any decisive split between Baghdad and Irbil.
  • (4) Music may still be a big part of AF Square's plans, though, judging by Carter's comment that "we need great minds around music: if entrepreneurs aren't incentivized, music is going to be stuck in the dark age".
  • (5) We need to change the entire culture and show people that it is not just a question of who commits the violence, but about all those that incentivize and maintain it,” she said.
  • (6) But when the country implemented policies that incentivized men taking time off in 1995 – like a “use it or lose it” month off specifically for fathers – the rate of paternity leave skyrocketed to more than eight in 10 men using it.
  • (7) The culture of DC think tanks, "international relations" professionals, and foreign policy commenters breeds allegiance to these American prerogatives and US power centers - incentivizes reflexive defenses of US government actions - because, as Gelb says, that is the only way to advance one's careerist goals as a "national security professional".
  • (8) Eisenberg said that the government initially sought to black out the word “incentivize” from Bogdan’s testimony but ultimately backed down.
  • (9) Health education implies all which supports life, growth, and incentivates the flowing of vitality, also all which helps to overcome both rigidity and unbalanced situations.
  • (10) In what looked like an attempt to salvage a compromise, Adler, the mayor, tried to introduce a voluntary scheme under which Uber and Lyft drivers would be incentivized, rather than compelled, to submit their fingerprints.
  • (11) Open-source reporting on each classified strike comes through official leaks, which incentivize presuming those killed are militants until proven otherwise.
  • (12) The NSA’s director, General Keith Alexander, told CBS that granting Snowden amnesty would reward the leaks and potentially incentivize future ones.
  • (13) Obama’s Race to the Top competition incentivized states to open up more charters.
  • (14) The methodological methods for a reduction of the noise pollution in the urban areas, mainly, can be advised in 8 operative points: 1) reduction of the source's noise; 2) control of the traffic; 3) planning of the urban and regional development; 4) building's shelter against the noise; 5) compensation's and incentivation's interventions for the exposed people; 6) controls activity and restaining of the noise's sources; 7) scientific research; 8) health education.
  • (15) While accountability is important, Vitchers said, "we need to have a conversation about how to incentivize schools to prevent sexual assault so they don't focus on compliance over prevention."
  • (16) That is something we are having great discussions on figuring out.” According to Hotez, the whole business model of vaccine development needs overhauling to incentivize mid-sized biotech firms and product development partnerships, which he’s involved in, to help find solutions.
  • (17) The results of a research project carried out along with head-physicians of the Municipal Health Services (PAMs) of the city of S. Paulo in order to survey their knowledge, expectations and willingness to participate in and incentivate educational programs in the various PAMs, are reported on.
  • (18) In a rational society with a quasi-thoughtful legislative body incentivized to not destroy government as we know it, lawmakers would come together to repair the ACA.
  • (19) As for China, the near-term emphasis ought to be on incentivizing Beijing to help deal with the most immediate threat emanating from that region, namely North Korea’s growing nuclear and missile capacity.
  • (20) In a statement supporting a bill to fight EPA regulations on carbon dioxide, Price said : “This decision goes against all common sense, especially considering the many recent revelations of errors and obfuscation in the allegedly ‘settled science’ of global warming.” He has consistently voted against incentivizing renewable energy sources with tax credits and in favor of increased oil exploration.

Words possibly related to "incentivise"

Words possibly related to "incentivize"