Answer:
84) The equilibrium is the only price where quantity demanded is equal to quantity supplied. At a price above equilibrium, like 1.8 dollars, quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded, so there is excess supply.
85) The equilibrium price and quantity are where the two curves intersect. The equilibrium point shows the price point where the quantity that the producers are willing to supply equals the quantity that the consumers are willing to purchase. This is the ideal quantity to supply
86) The existence of economic profits attracts entry, economic losses lead to exit, and in long-run equilibrium, firms in a perfectly competitive industry will earn zero economic profit.
87) The industry is in long-run equilibrium when a price is reached at which all firms are in equilibrium (producing at the minimum point of their LAC curve and making just normal profits). Under these conditions there is no further entry or exit of firms in the industry, given the technology and factor prices.
Explanation:
i dont know 82 or 83 sorry
I believe the answer is:
- What can go wrong?
This question is asked to find out the potential risk that may occur after purchasing the product.
- What is the likely return?
This question is asked to find out potential benefit from consuming the product
-Is the risk worth the return?
<span>The purchase should be made only if the potential benefit would outweigh potential risk
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Answer: open listing
Explanation:
Open listing simply refers to situation whereby a property owner uses several real estate agents when he or she wants to sell a property so that there will be many potential buyers.
In this situation, the agent who eventually brings the person who purchases the property will collects the commission assigned to the property.
1) Production Opportunities
2) Time Preferences for Consumption
3) Risk
4) Inflation
Explanation:
These are the factor reflects the ‘cost of money. The cost of the borrowing is the rate of interest paid by the lender to the creditor by the supply and demand of the assets.
1) Production Opportunities : Investment Opportunities to produce competitive (cash) assets.
2) Time Preferences for Consumption : Present market choice rather than potential demand savings.
3) Risk : The probability of a small or unfavourable return on an investment.
4) Inflation : The price will growing over time.
Yes it is possible to posses elements of more than 1.