Answer:
see below
Explanation:
The balance in Lucia's account is 1.05 times the original deposit, reflecting addition of 5% interest for the year.
The ticket price is the original price multiplied by (1 + inflation rate). The number of tickets that Lucia can purchase is the account balance divided by the ticket price. The quotient is rounded down to the nearest integer.
The "real interest rate" is the percentage change from the original number of tickets that could be purchased.
Question options:
a) NeNe can exclude all of the housing payment because she worked more than 330 days overseas
b) 16,128
c) 23,872
d) 14,112
e) None of her salary can be excluded from gross income
Answer:
a) NeNe can exclude all of the housing payment because she worked more than 330 days overseas
Explanation:
US citizens working and living abroad would still have to remit taxes to the US, albeit with exclusions.
Under US tax law, IRS states that US citizens may deduct/exclude the value of meal and lodging expenses granted to them by the employer. Under the foreign housing exclusion, Nene qualifies for the benefits of housing exclusion because she has a foreign earned income and has lived at least 330 days within a period of 12 consecutive months in the foreign country.
Answer:
See explanation section
Explanation:
See the images to get the answer
Answer:
The correct answer is option c.
Explanation:
A perfectly competitive market has a large number of buyers and sellers. The firms are price takers and the price is determined by the market forces. Thus the monopoly firms face a horizontal demand curve. This horizontal line represents price, average revenue, and marginal revenue. The equilibrium is obtained where price, (average revenue and marginal revenue) is equal to marginal cost. There is no restriction on entry and exit of firms in the long run. That's why firms face a break-even in the long run.
While in a monopoly market there is a single firm. This firm fixes price higher than marginal cost. The demand curve of the monopoly is a downward sloping showing relatively elastic demand. A monopoly firm can earn profits in both the short run as well as the long run.