A dynamic decision-making system has a reasonable logic behind its decisions and advances its policies based on that logic. On the opposite side are decision-making structures that react to all events and make changes in their system and change their decisions in the face of pressures, Morteza Afqeh, an economist and university professor, prefaced his write-up for the Persian-language daily Ta’adol with this note.
A translation of the text follows:
Whenever a decision is made regarding an increase in the salaries of a certain group (for example, social security organization’s pensioners), other groups also ask for a raise. The government usually gives in to these pressures, which have again produced the desired result.
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