Answer:
Johnson & Johnson make $51,433.28 every 20 seconds
Explanation:
<u><em>The complete question is</em></u>
I'm playing a riddle game thing and one of the questions is
"How many dollars does Johnson & Johnson make every 20 seconds?"
I found that they make 81.1 billion dollars yearly, but I have no clue how to get it to 20 seconds.
Remember that
1 year=365 days
1 day=24 hours
1 hour=60 minutes
1 minute=60 seconds
so
Convert year to seconds

1 billion=1,000 millions
1 billion=1*10^9
81.1 billion dollars=81.1*10^9 dollars
we have

Convert to $/sec

Multiply by 20 sec

therefore
Johnson & Johnson make $51,433.28 every 20 seconds
Answer:
$15000
Explanation:
All types of bonds have some common characteristics which include;
- A face/par value
- A coupon rate (interest rate).
- Either redeemable/irredeemable or convertible.
The face value of one bond is $1000 so the total value of 300 bonds would be $300,000 (300×$1000). In this example these are redeemable bonds which means Whitefeather Industries would be liable to payback the capital amount of bonds after five years (maturity date).
The coupon rate (i.e interest) is charged on Par value. So the Interest can be calculated as $300,000×10% = $30,000 per year.
In this question interest is payable semi-annually, therefore The amount of interest that occurs on December 31, 2017 is $15000 (For the last six months - July 1st till Dec 31st; $30000×6÷12).
Answer:
the answer is: B) improve productivity by reducing turnover.
Explanation:
The efficiency weigh theory states that when employers increase their employees' wages above average market wages, they will earn higher profits due to:
- An increase in labor productivity since the employees are very motivated to work in the company and employee turnover decreases.
- The increase in labor productivity and the decrease in employee turnover will offset the increase in costs due to higher wages.
Answer:
market rates have increased
Explanation:
Bonds as well as brokered CDs are priced depending on the market's interest rates for similar investments. For example, the CD pays a 3% interest, and then the market rate increases to 3.1% (or more), the CD's price will decrease. On the other hand, if the market rates decrease to 2.9% (or less), the CD's price will increase.
Checkbook
computer software