Answer:
The correct answer is b) a Ponzi scheme.
Explanation:
The Ponzi Scheme is a fraudulent investment operation that involves paying investors interest obtained from the money of new investors (and not from the generation of genuine profits). It is a pyramidal system, in which the only way to share benefits requires that participants recommend and capture (refer) to more clients with the objective that new participants produce benefits to primary participants.
This system does not invest in financial or other instruments, it only redistributes money from some investors to others, so the system works only if the number of investors in the pyramid continually grows; once people stop entering the "business", the scammer is prevented from fulfilling his promise and the pyramid collapses
Answer:
$519,799.59
Explanation:
Discount rate = R = 14.50%
Year Cash flows Discount factor PV of cash flows
1 218,000.00 0.873362 190,393.0131
2 224,000.00 0.762762 170,858.6793
3 238,000.00 0.666168 <u>158,547.9011</u>
Total of PV = NPV = <u> $519,799.59</u>
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Note:
Df = 1/(1+R)^Year
PV of cash flows = Cash flows x Df
Answer:
$26,125
Explanation:
[($25,000 x 0.005) x 9 + $25,000]
=$26,125
Zach owe $26,125 as of December 31, 2019 because he did not fail to file - he failed to pay. Hence he owes the 0.5% per month or part of a month failure to pay penalty plus the already outstanding tax amount of $25,000 that he owed.
Answer:
Therefore the required time period is 3 years.
Explanation:
To calculate the number of period we are using the following formula of future value
Future value = 
is cash flow at period 0= $ 35,00
r = rate of interest = 8.00% = 0.08
n= number of periods = ?
Future value = $44,089.92
Substituting the values in the formula





Therefore the required time period is 3 years.
Answer:
The answer is: True
Explanation:
First of all, the classical dichotomy in economics assumes that real variables of the economy such as output of goods and services and real interest rates are not influenced by what happens to their nominal counterparts, such as the monetary value of output and nominal interest rate. It doesn´t consider inflation or the nominal supply, in other words money supply is neutral in the economy (because its value is adjusted to inflation).
The real problem with this theory, at least in the short run, is that in real life money supply, interest rates and inflation do affect the GDP of a country. When the money supply of an economy is increased then aggregate demand also increases. More money equals more demand. That happens because the prices of goods and services doesn´t adjust as fast as a change in the money supply. Also this theory doesn´t consider the monetary circuit theory about money being "created" by the banking system every time a loan is made.