Answer:
11.35%
Explanation:
The calculation of WACC is shown below:-
WACC = Cost of equity × (equity ÷ (Debt + Equity)) + cost of debt × (debt ÷ (Debt + Equity)) × (1 - tax rate)
= 0.15 × (1 ÷ 1.50) + 0.06 × (0.50 ÷ 1.50) × (1 - 0.34)
= 0.15 × 0.67 + 0.06 × 0.33 × 0.66
= 0.1005 + 0.013068
= 11.35%
Therefore for computing the WACC we simply applied the above formula.
Answer:
Quotas do not affect the equilibrium price, whereas tariffs do not affect the equilibrium quantity.
Explanation:
The import tariff decreases the import quality from AD to CB and increases the price of the good from P to P*. The import restricting effect and consumption effect is same for quotas and tariff. So, the deadweight loss from them is the same from quotas and tariff (HIJ and GEF).
Please observe the image attached.
However, tariff enables the government to increase their revenue from the imports while import quotas precludes such revenue (GEHI). Thus, the cost tariff is lower than the import quotas imposed.
Book value
Cost of an asset-accumulated dep
97,600−82,000=15,600
So
18,000−15,600=2,400
a gain of $2,400.
Hope it helps
Answer:
Following would be the journal entries in the books of Elizabeth Procter,
On July 1, 2013.
Notes Receivable A/C Dr. $80,000
To Equipment A/C $80,000
(Being equipment sold against notes receivable being recorded)
On June 30, 2014
Notes Receivable A/C Dr. 9600
To Interest Revenue A/C 9600
(Being accrued interest on notes receivable recorded)
On Sept 2014,
Cash A/C Dr. 92,000
To Notes Receivable A/C $80,000
To Interest Receivable A/C $9600
To Interest Revenue A/C $2400
(Being notes receivable and interest received receipt being recorded)
Interest Revenue refers to the income which has been earned as on a date.
Interest Receivable refers to the income which has not been received and which has been outstanding.
Hi, you've asked an unclear question. However, I assume you're referring to levels of college selectivity.
Three levels of selectivity (college selectivity) are:
Most selective
Extremely selective
Very selective
Most selective: Colleges with this level of selectivity are said to accept fewer than 15% of all applicants, examples include, Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University, Stanford University
, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Extremely selective: Colleges with this level of selectivity are said to accept fewer than 35% of all applicants. Institutions under this category include Boston University, New York University, Georgia Institute of Technology, etc.
Very selective: The Colleges under this category accept fewer than 50% of all applicants. Examples are George Washington University, Kenyon College, Lafayette College,
North Carolina State University, etc.
These are some of the selectivity levels, you could find more Information from other online resources.