Answer:
Credit life Insurance
Explanation:
The scenario describes Credit life insurance
This is a form of insurance policy that that is designed to pay off the balance on a policy holder's outstanding loan in case of death. It is designed for the protection of lender and heirs who are co signers from loss in case of the death of the borrower.
The insurance is liable to the balance on the loan as at the time of the death of the borrower.
Answer:
It is False
The law of one price (LOOP) states that in the absence of trade frictions (such as transport costs and tariffs), and under conditions of free competition and price flexibility (where no individual sellers or buyers have power to manipulate prices and prices can freely adjust), identical goods sold in different.
Answer:
A fruitworm infestation ruins a large number of apple orchards in Washington state.
Explanation:
The fruitworm infestation would reduce supply. The supply curve would shift to the left as a result.
I hope my answer helps you
The completion of the following Medicare mathematical calculations by putting in the correct amounts is as follows:
a. Medicare payment: $173.60
b. Patient owes Dr. Input: $226.40
c. Dr. Input’s courtesy adjustment: $50
<h3>What is the courtesy adjustment?</h3>
Courtesy adjustment is the write-off of a part of the medical bills to reduce the payment burden on the patients not fully covered by Medicare.
<h3>Data and Calculations:</h3>
Original bill = $450
Unmet deductible = $183
a. Medicare payment: $173.60 ($400 x 43.4%)
b. Patient owes Dr. Input: $226.40 ($400 x 56.6%)
c. Dr. Input’s courtesy adjustment: $50 ($450 - $400)
Learn more about Medicare Payments at brainly.com/question/1960701
#SPJ1
<h3>Question Completion:</h3>
a. Medicare payment:
b. Patient owes Dr. Input:
c. Dr. Input’s courtesy adjustment:
Typically, a simple way to think of an input is anything that costs money. These can be both good and bad things. A simple example would be: if I had a machine that made candy: my inputs would be the energy required to run the machine, the person required to work the machine, and the ingredients I had to put in to make the candy. My outputs might be the candy the machine made and the happiness it gave to people who ate it. A negative output might be that it made people unhealthy.
As an internet company eBay does not have many of the typical inputs of doing business. For example, it does NOT have the cost of physical stores nor does it have the cost of depreciating inventory or any machines. For eBay, some examples of inputs would be it's people such as software engineers, marketing team, and executive staff. All overhead such as office space and the electricity to power its office space would be another example. Other examples could include the physical code behind eBay's software and money used to finance the company, and the data warehouses used to store everything.
Outputs can be thought of as the value a company creates. eBay's outputs are also somewhat atypical. eBay does not create a physical product that they then sell so that makes this a challenging question. You could argue that eBay's store or its platform is an output. All the data it produces as a company is an output and has a lot of value. Since eBay allows people across the world to open up their own store online, you could say it's creating the social good of jobs or entrepreneurship "global employment" through this action (eBay has supported this publicly as well so you could look up more about it on Google). Another output could be eBay stores created by sellers. eBay owns PayPal so if you can think of any related to PayPal you could include those as well and cite that eBay owns the company.
Hope that helps