You would do:
3.32 divided by 12 = 0.276 reccuring
then do 3.80 divided by 16 = 0.2375 ( these are the prices each pr fl. )
Then compare the numbers together
0.276
0.2375
if you look the top one goes 2 then seven while the bottom one goes two then 3 so the bottom one is the lat expensive
hope this help
Answer:
well, if in a bad situation, then it could effect the one's well- being as in insecurities, teased, bullied, it could even cause depression and anxiety. the list goes on and on. that's probably why people worn teenagers to be safe and think about what they are thinking about doing b4 they actually do it. like for example not being safe during sex. both partners could end up having a child together, unless the partners are of the same sex then I'd suggest being carful on where things go really.
Explanation:
<span>The largest social class and were the workers,farmers and construction workers.</span>
Answer:
Diffusion of responsibility
Explanation:
Diffusion of responsibility is the concept that similar in many ways with bystander effect. In this concept when there is something happened in front of a group of people and each individual thinks that the other person is there to take the responsibility called diffusion of responsibility. In this scenario, no one takes responsibility.
Thus when you see an injured dog alongside the road and it seems hit and run by the victim. But that time you are going so busy and you think there is no need for his/her help. Another person is there they will help but no one does that is called diffusion of responsibility.
Answer: true
Explanation: One factor that seems to cause baby boomers to hark back to the Carter administration is high gasoline prices. When people think of Carter-era inflation, they often connect it to those high prices and the high world price of oil starting in 1973 and increasing, with fits and starts, through the 1970s. But one increased price does not inflation make. We can’t tell anything about inflation by looking at specific prices.
It is true that when a country such as the United States is a net importer of oil, an increase in the price of oil will, all else equal, cause our real GDP to be lower than otherwise. Go back to the equation of exchange discussed earlier. With slightly lower real GDP than otherwise, the price level, and therefore inflation, is higher than otherwise. But today the United States is only a small net importer of oil and as recently as late 2019 was a slight net exporter. So an increase in the price oil simply helps domestic producers to about the same extent that it hurts domestic consumers. The net effect on real US GDP is close to zero.
There’s one caveat to the above. Any government policy that causes waste makes real GDP lower than otherwise and, therefore, causes the price level to be somewhat higher than otherwise. The wasteful policy that is one of the factors in the recent increase in gasoline prices is the federal government’s policy on ethanol, which began during the George W. Bush administration. Although I can’t go into a detailed explanation here, the federal government’s requirement that refiners use ethanol in gasoline adds 30 cents to the price per gallon. Not all of that 30 cents was added recently. But the recently increased price of waivers that allow refiners to avoid using car-destroying ethanol has accounted for some of the recent increase in gasoline prices.