-
In Europe, by contrast, unions tend to be less simplistically nationalistic, especially at the top.
ECONOMIST: Unions
-
Bottom line: If your vendor is quoting simplistically, is it going to provide experts doing quality work?
FORBES: This Year, Why Not Take Your Data Seriously?
-
Simplistically speaking of course, when you reduce the mental barrier, you allow the second option to flourish.
FORBES: Howard Schultz to Anti-Gay-Marriage Starbucks Shareholder: 'You Can Sell Your Shares'
-
Fads usually attempt to address complex organizational problems simplistically, facilitating superficial implementations so that everyone can feel confident of buying in.
FORBES: What Data Science Can Do To Become A Classic
-
To describe simplistically, the researchers said they took a vessel and filled it with about a liter and a half of water.
FORBES: FOCUS: 'Microbial Alchemy' Produces Gold From Toxic Chemical
-
Simplistically, this means that each spouse somehow has their own stash of money that they are allowed to spend however they please.
FORBES: Applying Spousonomics To Money Problems
-
Simplistically stated, if the laws of physics as we know them are correct, the vast majority of the universe--some 96% of it, in fact--consists of this stuff.
FORBES: Magazine Article
-
He saw things simply, sometimes simplistically, but always clearly.
ECONOMIST: Ronald Reagan
-
Mr Balls in particular, commonly regarded simplistically as a left-winger, is thought to be a restraining influence on those in his party who yearn to throw taxes, regulations and rhetorical bile at the banks.
ECONOMIST: Labour and the City
-
"Fedhead Greenspan is playing with fire, but whether he understands that, or is merely simplistically assuming a little inflation would help counteract a deflation, will be revealed in the fullness of time, " writes Dines, whose portfolios were up on average 23% last year.
FORBES: Gurus Still Going For Gold
-
Furthermore, lest anyone simplistically respond that Africans just emerging from conflicts need peacebuilding, not the accoutrements of armed security, it is worth recalling that acclaimed development economist Paul Collier and his colleague Anke Hoeffler found in their study on Military Expenditure in Post-Conflict Society that in the first five years after a peace agreement a given country's estimated risk of renewed conflict is about 44 percent.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: A stimulus for African security