Answer:
a. price discrimination.
Explanation:
Price discrimination is pricing strategy where different prices are charged to different customers for the same product or service based on what the seller thinks he can get from each of them.
There are 3 types of price discrimination:
-First degree: is price discrimination where firm charges different price for every unit sold. Also called perfect discrimination.
-Second degree: is discrimination where the firm charges different prices for different quantities.
-Third degree: is when the seller charges different price for different consumer groups.
Hendry Products charges Montgomery Meats a lower price, and charges other firms similar to Montgomery Meats more for the same products. Hendry Products is practicing third degree price discrimination.
Answer:oligopoly
Explanation:
An oligopoly is a market which is controlled by a small number of larger sellers
Answer:
(A) Half-year and (D) Half-year
Explanation:
MACRS stands for Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System and is the most commonly-used tax depreciation method .Without getting into too much detail, MACRS is accelerated depreciation that allows for a larger deduction while the asset is still new. By comparison, straight-line depreciation gives you the same deduction year after year over the asset's useful life. MACRS cannot be used for intangible property, nor can it be used to depreciate. MACRS convention determines the number of months for which you can claim depreciation during a partial year, either when you first placed the asset in service or when you disposed of it. The mid-month convention only applies to residential rental property, nonresidential real property, and railroad grading or tunnel bore. It simply means that you get a half month's worth of depreciation no matter when that asset was placed into (or taken from) service during that month, whether that was at the beginning, middle, or end of the month. The half-year convention works the same way but instead of the month it goes by the year. In other words, you'll get 6 months' depreciation if the asset was placed into service or disposed of during the year, no matter if it was in January or December.