Answer:
All Of The Above
Explanation:
A cost benefit analysis (CBA) estimates and/or totals up the amount of money a certain place or organization takes up. Based on that sum of money, the CBA decides if the place or organization is useful or needs to be there, or if they are just wasting money. The CBA determines whether to keep the place / organization using opinions and it is subjective, subjective meaning based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.
The CBA weighs benefits against cost. This means that they take the sum of money that "thing" uses and weighs that against how useful it is, what benefits it has, and how much people use and need it. These projects may be dams and highways or can be training programs and health care systems. If they take up to much money and are not used, they are taken out.
Mordancy.
Answer:
As the details of the job are not included, I shall use the general source documents for these costs.
Direct Materials ⇒ Material requisition slip/document
These are documents that list out the materials that are needed for the production of the good in question. It is sent to inventory where the materials would be acquired from.
Direct Labor ⇒ Time sheets / Records
The company will have some form of time sheet or other recoding document that workers can use to clock the the time they worked on the good.
Manufacturing Overhead Cost ⇒ Predetermined rate.
For manufacturing overheads, a predetermined rate is usually used to apportion the cost.
Answer:
b. Both the equilibrium wage and quantity decrease.
Explanation:
When a market is in equilibrium, quantity supplied equals quantity demanded.
When swimming pools adopt labour saving technology, the quantity of labour demanded falls. This leads to a decrease in equilibrium wage and quantity . When supply exceeds demand, wages fall and labour would leave the lifeguard industry due to decreased demand.
Check out the attached image for a graphical explanation
I hope my answer helps you.
The answer is : False. The group <span>Texas Association of School Boards </span>said Texas ranks 49th in per-pupil funding among the states. Texas ranks 48th among the states, according to preliminary figures, and 49th only if one also considers spending in the schools in Washington, D.C., which is not a state.