gold-plated

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See also: goldplated, and gold plated

English

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Alternative forms

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Adjective

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gold-plated (not comparable)

  1. Having a thin layer of gold applied to the surface, often by electrolysis.
  2. (of projects, systems, etc.) Incorporating costly or otherwise excessive features or refinements unnecessarily; overengineered.
    • 1988, Sadhan Choudhury, “Concepts of Project Management”, in Project Management[1], Tata McGraw-Hill, →ISBN, page 33:
      One often hears of gold plated designs with reference to our engineers lack of concern for cost.
    • 2001, United States Congress, quoting Senator Max Baucus, Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the 107th Congress, First Session[2], Volume 147—Part 4: March 27, 2001 to April 23, 2001, Government Printing Office, Congressional Record—Senate April 3, 2001, page 5264:
      We have to do enough that works. Not a gold-plated program, but a solid one
    • 2008, David Starkie, “Testing the Regulatory Model”, in Aviation Markets: Studies on Competition and Regulatory Reform[3], Ashgate Publishing, →ISBN, page 108:
      The consequence of this regulatory approach is that it has provided an opportunity for airport companies to exercise their market power indirectly through higher-than-necessary levels of investment in capacity and in costly gold-plated investment.
    • 2008, Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development, “Economic and Policy Instruments to Promote Adapation”, in Shardul Agrawala, Samuel Frankhauser, editors, Economic Aspects of Adaptation to Climate Change: Costs, Benefits and Policy[4], OECD Publishing, →ISBN, Public private partnerships, page 125:
      There are countless examples of gold-plated or excessive infrastructure projects — whether publicly or privately financed.
    • 2021 November 17, Andrew Mourant, “Okehampton: a new dawn for Dartmoor”, in RAIL, number 944, page 41:
      "[...] We could have made this a gold-plated railway but that would have cost a considerable amount more than £40m."
  3. (of laws, regulations, etc.) Embellished to excess, especially so as to be stifling, or rigid and inflexible.
    • 2002 January 29, Peter Ainsworth, “Farming and Food Commission Report”, in parliamentary debates (House of Commons)‎[5], column 155:
      Has society introduced swathes of new gold-plated regulations?
    • 2007, House of Lords: European Union Committee, quoting Baroness Gale, Modernising European Union Labour Law: Has the UK Anything to Gain?, Report with Evidence, 22nd Report of Session 2006-07[6], The Stationery Office, →ISBN, 29 March 2007: Ms Susan Anderston and Mr Tom Moran, page 32:
      The UK has this gold-plated approach, is that beneficial to the UK in terms of the rest of Europe and in terms of the business and the employees? Do we benefit to a greater degree by adopting such an approach

Usage notes

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The sense relating to laws and regulations is particularly used in relation to European Union directives

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Translations

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Verb

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gold-plated

  1. simple past and past participle of gold-plate

See also

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