do more harm than good
English
Verb
do more harm than good (third-person singular simple present does more harm than good, present participle doing more harm than good, simple past did more harm than good, past participle done more harm than good)
- To make a situation worse, usually while trying to make it better.
- 2008, David Schoenbrod, Power Without Responsibility: How Congress Abuses the People through Delegation:
- In other words, they will tend to vote for a bill if they think that the public will perceive it as doing more good than harm, even though it might actually do more harm than good. The public can misperceive the real effects of a bill
Translations
to make a situation worse, usually while trying to make it better
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References
- “do more harm than good”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
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