<span>Your question lacks some context. So, I am going to assume that you are talking about relates to America as a whole. If my assumption is right, I'd have to say that the answer is false because they are at the state level and the federal level outranks it. For instance, if Texas passes a law abolishing a minimum wage, the law on federal minimum wage still must be followed.</span>
The answer top the question stated above is letter D. It would improve the economy's situation.
For F<span>riedrich Von </span>Hayek, less government intervention<span> meant more </span>economic freedom. He believed that if people are free to choose, then the economy runs more efficiently.
Thus, it would improve the economy's situation.
Answer: The correct answer is "(A) Materiality.".
Explanation: The concept demonstrated is Materiality because by having a mechanism for preventing bad accounts through their strict requirements, they only recorded bad accounts when they actually existed, instead of making a provision.
Answer:
The correct answer is d. Different economic models employ different sets of assumptions.
Explanation:
To approach the study of economic reality it is necessary, in some way, to simplify it; keep certain variables under control. Precisely for this, it is that economic models are built.
Economic models are built on principles of departure, called "assumptions." Such assumptions fulfill the same role as the postulates in geometry. That is:
- They are not subject to deduction from other more basic principles.
- They are "reasonably" true but not necessarily verifiable.
- They function as premises in the logical structure to deduce the conclusions and correlations found in the lowest levels of generality.
We can say then, that the theoretical explanations refer to invisible "relationships", whose existence is proposed by the theory, and whose implications are logically deduced, and then corroborated by observations. They consist of:
- Assumptions (eg subjects want to maximize their earnings).
- Relevant variables (eg price and quantity).
- Binding hypothesis (eg quantity demanded based on price).
- Conclusions or predictions of observable facts (eg prices will rise).