The misstatement is immaterial in the overall context of the financial statements represents a viable defense.
<u>Option: A</u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
An object may be immaterial individually, but when it is consolidated with lots of immaterial objects it can be material. When this happens, then the impact becomes material. A mistake of an individual element may cause serious misrepresentation of the financial statements.
Materiality direct to the relative size of a number as the relatively large quantities are content, while the relatively small quantities are not material or immaterial. A further perception of materiality is that sophisticated investors will be deceived by omitting or misclassifying the number.
Answer:
40 students
Explanation:
The cost of the bus is $480
For x students, the cost of each ticket will be 35 - 0.30x
The total cost of the tickets for x students will be x(35 - 0.30x)
To find the number of students that will make the cost per student equal to $33, we solve for x:
<u>480+ x(35 - 0.30x)</u> =35
x
480+ x(35 - 0.30x<u>)</u> = 35x
480 + 35x - 0.30x² = 35x
480 = 0.30x²
1,600 = x²
40 = x
The cost per student will be $35 if the number of students is 40; it will be less than $35 if the number of students is greater than 40.
Answer:
The answer is "competitive parity with each other".
Explanation:
It refers to spending on a level equal to your opponents, while you spend more on performing than our competition in a competitive edge. The goods offered by the competitors are each were and can easily be swapped with the product.
It is a defensive strategy used by companies, whilst still the financial resources, to protect their image, brand & positioning. A sector where, compared to others in your sector, you achieve ordinary or average results.
Answer:
the marginal utility from drinking one more glass of water is likely to be <u>needing to pee hugely</u> the marginal utility from going to one more movie.
Explanation:
Answer:
When a taxpayer has an underpayment of estimated tax or fall behind on his/her tax prepayment, then he/she is required to pay a penalty on Form 2210. This penalty is called underpayment penalty.
According to the tax laws, Mr. P and Ms. S can avoid an underpayment penalty if their withholding's and estimated tax payments equal or exceed one of the following two safe harbors:
- 90 percent of current tax liability ($200,000 x 90% = $180,000)
- 110 percent of previous year tax liability (110% x $170,000 = $187,000)
From the above calculation, it is clear that Mr. P and Ms. S's withholding's ($175,000) do not equal or exceed the amount of two safe harbors. So, they need to increase their withholding's or make estimated payments to avoid underpayment penalty.
If Mr. P and Ms. S increase their withholding's by $5,000 or make estimated payments of $1,250
per quarter ($5000/4), they can avoid the underpayment penalty.
Mr. Paula and Simon average gross income is greater than $150,000, so 110% is taken.