Answer:
The correct answer is letter "B":You have to earn below a certain amount to make contributions .
Explanation:
A Roth Individual Retirement Account (IRA) is the type of retirement account where contributions grow tax-free and allows individuals to withdraw funds under certain conditions. <em>People are eligible to open a Roth IRA as long as their income is less than $139,000 for singles and $206,000 for married couples- </em>information that applies for the year 2020.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
d. encourages both U.S. and foreign residents to buy U.S. assets.
Explanation:
The interest rate in a country has influence on the capital of it. 
When the real interest rates in the United States increase, the U.S. assets have higher value so that become attractive to funds. Thus, it encourages both foreign and U.S. residents to buy U.S. assets.
Besides, when the real interest rate in the U.S. increases, it encourages the U.S residents to save more U.S. assets and  discourage them from purchasing foreign assets
=> The net capital inflow in U.S would increase
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Explanation:
Required return = (dividend / price per share) + constant growth rate.
Dividend yield on the stock =  (dividend / price per share) = 5.5%
Therefore, Required return = 5.5% + 4.2% = 9.7%
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
D. Dividends Payable
Explanation:
On the day dividends are declared, the amount declared is debited to the retained earnings accounts and credited to the dividend payable accounts. The dividends have not yet been paid, meaning the money is still with the company. For this reason, the cash account.
A dividend is not an expense, so there can never be a dividend expense account.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Suppose the federal reserve (The Fed ) announces that it is lowering its target interest rate by 75
basis points or 0.75% . It would achieve this by shifting the supply curve of the money to the...