Answer:
ex-urbs resulted from suburbanization (or counterurbanization, the first term sounds better to me)
Explanation:
In the past, city planners thought about large cities as concentric rings or sectoral divisions, but the rapid growth of suburbs have challenged those concepts. As more people moved into suburbs, not only rich people, but middle class also, the suburbs gained importance. Currently in the US, more people live in the suburbs than in cities or rural areas.
This process led to the formation of small satellite suburbs that were large enough to be considered small towns, and they multiplied. Each small satellite suburb (or ex-urb) keeps growing and have the advantage of lower housing costs, and the time it takes to go the large cities is not that long anymore. I currently live on a "small town" where many people go to work in the morning and return in the afternoon. But you also notice how more and more offices are opened here, not a lot of factories though.
In my personal experience, new businesses started to form around the train and bus station, and now it is full of small bank offices, restaurants, stores and a couple of supermarkets. People who lived there moved a little farther away and it is like a small downtown area.
Answer:
Fairness rule
Explanation:
In the fairness rule, the seller is responsible for the information given by him to a buyer in order to make a reasonable judgement whether to buy a product or not until informed by the seller. It is the responsibility of the seller to give all the necessary information to the buyer so that he is able to take the decision regarding the purchase
Answer:
C) Provide products to the market because that is the task you have been assigned by central planners.
Explanation:
A command economy or command market is an economy where the government controls everything: production, investment, prices, and incomes.
In such a market you are assigned where to work and what to do, you are not free to decide what you would like to study and what work you would like to do. The same applies to businesses, they all depend on the government.
Hmm...I think Brainly is a place for asking/answering questions, not creating ads...hmm, oh well lol