Answer:
Has an opportunity cost
- Having a "lazy afternoon" VS Working an 8 hour shift VS
- Cooking dinner VS Eating out
- Reading you favorite book VS Catching up with an old friend
Explanation:
Opportunity costs refer to the extra costs or benefits lost associated with choosing one activity or investment over another alternative. In other words, every activity that you carry out includes the opportunity cost of not doing something else. No matter what we do, we could be doing something else.
Answer:
Section 5 of the FTC Act
Explanation:
Section 5 of the FTC Act prohibited companies to make "deceptive actions" during all activities in a commerce.
In marketing, this section of the Act prevented companies to falsely promoting their products. They're required to truthfully listed all ingredients of the product and banned from making claim that are misleading to the consumers.
For example, you can't claim a drug that you sell can cure cancer without proper authorized researches to back it up.
Stair rails is a barrier along the open sides of stairways and platforms that prevent falling is
Hello!
You forgot the alternatives!
incentives
<span>margin </span>
<span>markets </span>
<span>scarcity
</span>
The term that is most closely related to trade-off, from the list above, is: scarcity. Scarcity is the condition that moves the trade-offs, it determines the quantity of each product you need or have. So, for example, if you need a product that you don't have enough and another that you have in excess, you can exchange it with someone that have interest in your product and has the one that you need.
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