Business, 31.05.2020 01:01, kyrabrown33
What a great session on resource and market structures we are having! Now, you get the opportunity to talk about the difference between the two types of structures with your colleagues. Locate a firm in the U. S. or in the country where you reside and distinguish the difference between factor markets and product markets. Examine how households influence factor markets and discuss.
Answers: 1
Business, 22.06.2019 11:10, allieallie
Use the information below to answer the following question. the boxwood company sells blankets for $60 each. the following was taken from the inventory records during may. the company had no beginning inventory on may 1. date blankets units cost may 3 purchase 5 $20 10 sale 3 17 purchase 10 $24 20 sale 6 23 sale 3 30 purchase 10 $30 assuming that the company uses the perpetual inventory system, determine the gross profit for the month of may using the lifo cost method.
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Business, 22.06.2019 23:10, hannah2757
Until recently, hamburgers at the city sports arena cost $4.70 each. the food concessionaire sold an average of 13 comma 000 hamburgers on game night. when the price was raised to $5.40, hamburger sales dropped off to an average of 6 comma 000 per night. (a) assuming a linear demand curve, find the price of a hamburger that will maximize the nightly hamburger revenue. (b) if the concessionaire had fixed costs of $1 comma 500 per night and the variable cost is $0.60 per hamburger, find the price of a hamburger that will maximize the nightly hamburger profit.
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Business, 23.06.2019 00:30, destinyd10189
Dr. hughes enjoys offering to employees who perform over and above the call of duty
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Business, 23.06.2019 01:40, kaiya789
6. why the aggregate supply curve slopes upward in the short run in the short run, the quantity of output that firms supply can deviate from the natural level of output if the actual price level in the economy deviates from the expected price level. several theories explain how this might happen. for example, the misperceptions theory asserts that changes in the price level can temporarily mislead firms about what is happening to their output prices. consider a soybean farmer who expects a price level of 100 in the coming year. if the actual price level turns out to be 90, soybean prices will , and if the farmer mistakenly assumes that the price of soybeans declined relative to other prices of goods and services, she will respond by the quantity of soybeans supplied. if other producers in this economy mistake changes in the price level for changes in their relative prices, the unexpected decrease in the price level causes the quantity of output supplied to the natural level of output in the short run.
Answers: 3
What a great session on resource and market structures we are having! Now, you get the opportunity t...
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