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Sophie [7]
4 years ago
13

One of your customers is delinquent on his accounts payable balance. You’ve mutually agreed to a repayment schedule of $750 per

month. You will charge 1.9 percent per month interest on the overdue balance. If the current balance is $18,000, how long will it take for the account to be paid off? (Do not round intermediate calculations and round your answer to 2 decimal places, e.g., 32.16.) Months for account to be paid off months
Business
1 answer:
Lena [83]4 years ago
6 0

Answer:

32.34 months

Explanation:

A = monthly payment amount P = loan amount i = monthly interest rate n = total number of payments.

A = 750, P = 18000 i = 0.019 n = n.

Need to find n.

Monthly payment formula is:

A=\frac{P*i}{1-(1+i)^{-n} }

1-(1+i)^{-n}=\frac{P*i}{ A}\\1-(1+0.019)^{-n}=\frac{18000*0.019}{ 750}\\

1-(1+0.019)^{-n}=0.456\\-(1+0.019)^{-n}=0.456-1\\(1+0.019)^{-n} = 0.544\\-n * ln(1.019) =ln (0.544)\\

-n * 0.018821754241 =-0.60880603213\\n= 32.34 months

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Answer:

$16,100 favorable

Explanation:

The computation of the direct labor efficiency variance for June is shown below:

= Standard rate × (standard hours - actual hours)

= $23 × (1.3 × 35,000 - 44,800)

= $16,100 favorable

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The same should be considered and relevant

3 0
3 years ago
A monopolist finds that a person’s demand for its product depends on the person’s age. The inverse demand function of someone of
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Explanation:

A manufacturer of computer memory chips produces chips in lots of 1000. If nothing has gone wrong in the manufacturing process, at most 7 chips each lot would be defective, but if something does go wrong, there could be far more defective chips. If something goes wrong with a given lot, they discard the entire lot. It would be prohibitively expensive to test every chip in every lot, so they want to make the decision of whether or not to discard a given lot on the basis of the number of defective chips in a simple random sample. They decide they can afford to test 100 chips from each lot. You are hired as their statistician.

There is a tradeoff between the cost of eroneously discarding a good lot, and the cost of warranty claims if a bad lot is sold. The next few problems refer to this scenario.

Problem 8. (Continues previous problem.) A type I error occurs if (Q12)

Problem 9. (Continues previous problem.) A type II error occurs if (Q13)

Problem 10. (Continues previous problem.) Under the null hypothesis, the number of defective chips in a simple random sample of size 100 has a (Q14) distribution, with parameters (Q15)

Problem 11. (Continues previous problem.) To have a chance of at most 2% of discarding a lot given that the lot is good, the test should reject if the number of defectives in the sample of size 100 is greater than or equal to (Q16)

Problem 12. (Continues previous problem.) In that case, the chance of rejecting the lot if it really has 50 defective chips is (Q17)

Problem 13. (Continues previous problem.) In the long run, the fraction of lots with 7 defectives that will get discarded erroneously by this test is (Q18)

Problem 14. (Continues previous problem.) The smallest number of defectives in the lot for which this test has at least a 98% chance of correctly detecting that the lot was bad is (Q19)

(Continues previous problem.) Suppose that whether or not a lot is good is random, that the long-run fraction of lots that are good is 95%, and that whether each lot is good is independent of whether any other lot or lots are good. Assume that the sample drawn from a lot is independent of whether the lot is good or bad. To simplify the problem even more, assume that good lots contain exactly 7 defective chips, and that bad lots contain exactly 50 defective chips.

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Problem 16. (Continues previous problem.) The expected number of lots the manufacturer must make to get one good lot that is not rejected by the test is (Q22)

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7 0
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Consider Management as the top tier. Select your campus as next to the first one and pick Student's Affairs department as the la
Juli2301 [7.4K]

Answer:

Explanation:

Process perspective relates to the study of how a business runs internally. Measures based on this process allows the management to make an efficient decision on how their services meet the demands of their clients.

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            Management of campus succeeded in the process of making

                    guidelines for various affairs associated with the student.

                                                         ↓

                                                  Campus

      Campus has several departments that deal with the various entities

         of the campus such as lecturers, industries,  senate delegates,

                      governmental agencies, student's welfare, etc.

                                                        ↓

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         ↓                       ↓                    ↓                   ↓                  ↓

        Scholarship  Examination    Event         Grevianve   Alumni    

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7 0
3 years ago
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Irina18 [472]

Answer:

start of depression

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An extended recessionary period is indicative of. A: An extended recessionary period is indicative of depression.

6 0
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worty [1.4K]

Answer:

Refer explanation.

Explanation:

A production possibility frontier is a graph that shows all the different combinations of output of two goods that can be produced by a specific country using limited resources and technology. It elaborates on the concept of trade-off, choice and scarcity.

a. Please refer Diagram attached.

b. Point X marked on the diagram is feasible because it is on the line. Any point on the line or inside is feasible since the country has the resources and technology to produce it. It is also efficient since any point on the PPF curve means that maximum output of a particular product is being produced using scare resources.

c. Opportunity cost is the benefit lost from the second best alternative. At point C, 2 cakes are being produced and 7 cookies are being produced. When an additional cake is produced (i.e. 3), the number of cookies produced is 3. Hence, the opportunity cost of producing an additional cake is 3 cookies (7-4).

d. At point E, no cookies can be produced but 4 cakes are being produced. When production moves to C, 2 cakes and 7 cookies are being produced. Thus, opportunity cost from point E to C is the loss of two cakes.

e. The law of diminishing returns is defined as that when additional increments of resources are added to a particular purpose, the marginal benefit gained from that purpose will decline. In the current case, at point E, when 4 cakes are being produced, 0 cookies can be produced. However, when one cake is sacrificed and those resources go into cookie production, 4 cookies can be produced (point D). This diversion of resources, causes a little loss to cake production but a larger gain to cookie production.

However, at the other end, at point B, when almost all resources are devoted to cookies, 1 cake is produced and 9 cookies. Devoting further to cookies would lead to only an additional of one cookie being produced, but also a loss of 1 cake, leading to no cakes to be able to be produced. The gains to cookie production from adding these last few resources are very little but the loss of cake production is large (100%). This shows the law of diminishing returns. It is important for economies to understand where production would have large gains and optimum amounts of both products can be produced.

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4 years ago
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