0 a balancing of two opposing situations or qualities, both of which are desired:
The tradeoff in a democracy is between individual liberty and an orderly society.
They both had successful careers, but the tradeoff was they seldom saw each other.
This approach will identify the tradeoffs that exist between the level of accuracy obtained and the costs of undertaking each method.
A genetic constraint should be understood as a selective tradeoff between the new mutation and the existing genome.
The article concludes that even partial cost-benefit analysis can yield valuable insights regarding protected areas costs, benefits and tradeoffs.
Although increasing plan generosity and enhancing plan communication can significantly boost employees' appreciation of their retirement programs, there is a tradeoff to consider.
For a given level of consumption, the tradeoff for increasing contributions is a reduction in conventional saving.
Here, it is recommended to determine appropriate densities to achieve a tradeoff between accuracy and computational effort.
This is the key parameter that generates a tradeoff between cross-sectional estimation and dynamic simulation.
The result is the classic tradeoff between environmental quality and economic welfare.