Answer and Explanation:
Factors of production are resources or inputs put into the production of goods and services. There are four factors of production. They are: land, labour, capital and entrepreneurship
Land is considered a non depreciablle factor of production. It refers to all natural resources or gifts of nature and income from it is called rent.
Labour is human capital or input in production example workers in a factory
Capital is man made goods utilized to produce other goods
Entrepreneurship/entrepreneur is the factor of production that organizes the other factors of production and carries the economic risk
From the example, the factors of production include:
The forest with all the wood which falls under land factor of production.
Bill who falls under labour factor of production
His father's chainsaw which falls under capital factor of production
Bill's idea to use logs of wood for Christmas tree business constitutes entrepreneurship and Bill is also the entrepreneur here. This falls under the entrepreneurship factor of production
It would be the Hacienda system. I’m not sure if your talking about Spanish slavery but if you are it’s the Hacienda system because it functioned by keeping the people working on the land in debt in some way or another so that they could not leave.
Why is an ecosystem considered to be a self supporting system?
An example of a ecosystem is a tropical forest and it is self supporting because the rain forest gas sunlight produce food from a process known as photosynthesis and then the animals eat the food which at one point be eaten by other animals.
do not just copy and paste. please rewrite it in your own words.
Answer:
"Both seem confident and accepting."
Explanation:
Just took the test
The ability of young infants to make fine discriminations between sounds is particularly important in the development of their ability to understand <u>"Language."</u>
At 6 months, the monolingual newborn children could segregate between phonetic sounds, regardless of whether they were expressed in the dialect they were accustomed to hearing or in another dialect not talked in their homes. By 10 months to a year, notwithstanding, monolingual infants were never again recognizing sounds in the second dialect, just in the dialect they typically heard.
The analysts proposed this speaks to a procedure of "neural commitment," in which the baby mind wires itself to comprehend one dialect and its sounds.