stop-go
English
editAlternative forms
editAdjective
editstop-go (comparative more stop-go, superlative most stop-go)
- Alternately active and inactive; intermittent.
- We are suffering the consequences of three years of a stop-go economic policy.
- 2022 December 14, “Network News: A pipeline of work key for apprentices”, in RAIL, number 972, page 17:
- Scottish rail suppliers have told the Government that they can only reach their target of employing 500 apprentices if they are given a clear pipeline of work, rather than having to endure the current stop-go programme.
Noun
edit- An economic policy of this kind.
- 2014, Max Schulze, Western Europe: Economic and Social Change since 1945, page 277:
- […] the concern with increasing economic growth led to charges that stop-go was inhibiting investment and hence slowing the expansion of the economy.