Answer:
335.43 million gallons
Explanation:
price elasticity of demand (PED) = % change in quantity demanded / % change in price
PED = -1.9% / 10% = -0.19, very inelastic
expected price increase $0.40
% change in price = ($3.45 - $3.05) / $3.05 = 13.11%
% change in quantity demanded:
-0.19 = D / 13.11%
D = 2.49%
quantity demanded will decrease by 2.49%, from 344 million gallons to 335.43 million gallons
This problem is solved by using the compound interest formula:
A=P(1+(I/period))^(number of periods)
Where A = amount accumulated and P = amount loaned and I = Interest
A = ? P = $2, 000, I = 0.115, Period = 2 (semi annually) Number of period = 2
*7 (I. e paid twice over a 7 yrs span)
So we have
A = 2000 ( 1 + 0.115/2)^(14)
A = 2000 ( 1 + 0.0575)^(14)
A = 2000 (1.0575)^(14)
A = 2000 (2.1873851765154) = 4374.77035
So we have 4374.80 to the nearest cent.
Answer: Yes I do.
Explanation:
The 1950s were a time of great fear to people in the developed world. They feared that as the Cold War was just beginning, there were being watched by foreign powers and that they couldn't trust a lot of people because they didn't know who was who. Especially in America where the fear of Communism gripped the nation. They did not know if certain adverts were Communist Propaganda and they feared that sometimes the information government's had about them was used to Target them.
This fear is still quite evident today. Take the 2016 Election rumours for instance. Certain Social media platforms claimed that foreign powers used their sites to advertise the President and get him elected. The ease by which this was accepted showed that people do indeed still have fear advertising.
Answer:
The correct answer is letter "C": authority - exert economic and political power
.
Explanation:
The Project Management Institute (PMI) establishes in its "<em>Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct" </em>that there are four milestones important to consider for every project manager: <u><em>honesty</em></u><em>, </em><u><em>responsibility</em></u><em>, </em><u><em>respect</em></u><em>, </em>and<em> </em><u><em>fairness</em></u>. According to the PMI, those values drive not only the ethical life in the managerial but the real world, where the best outcome is the most ethical.
In that sense, "<em>authority</em>" has nothing to do with the PMI's Code of Ethics.