Answer:
D - Tier 2 supplier.
Explanation:
Tier 1 and Tier 2 suppliers usually refers to suppliers of the automotive industry. A Tier 1 supplier deals directly with the client (just like Lear Corporation and Ford in the example) whereas a Tier 2 suppliear supplies products to this Tier 1 suppliear (just like Jones Manufacturing and Lear Corp.) which then supplies to the OEM.
Answer:
The Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union was an agreement among the 13 original states of the United States of America that served as its first constitution. It was approved, after much debate (between July 1776 and November 1777), by the Second Continental Congress on November 15, 1777, and sent to the states for ratification. The Articles of Confederation came into force on March 1, 1781, after being ratified by all 13 states. A guiding principle of the Articles was to preserve the independence and sovereignty of the states. The weak central government established by the Articles received only those powers which the former colonies had recognized as belonging to king and parliament.
Explanation:
The document provided clearly written rules for how the states' "league of friendship" would be organized. During the ratification process, the Congress looked to the Articles for guidance as it conducted business, directing the war effort, conducting diplomacy with foreign states, addressing territorial issues and dealing with Native American relations. Little changed politically once the Articles of Confederation went into effect, as ratification did little more than legalize what the Continental Congress had been doing. That body was renamed the Congress of the Confederation; but most Americans continued to call it the Continental Congress, since its organization remained the same.
<em>The correct answer is </em><em>D. Protecting private property rights.</em>
In a market economy all market agents exchange goods and services for a fee. The difference between income from sales and production costs generates the economic benefits for the company that supplies them.
Companies and entrepreneurs can reinvest the profits and increase the volume of business when they consider necessary to improve their performance or volume of business. They need be sure that all the capital accumulated belongs to each individual capitalist (accionist, partner, owner, etc.). The government have the purpose of guaranteed that right: <em>Private property rights. </em>
When an innovation is introduced into the market, at the beginning income can increase very fast because it is a new product which is accepted by the consumer market, so the innovator have a period of a kind of monopoly. Then, others competitors enter in the market as producers, so the price can low because of the effect of the competition. So, it is very important to protect de patent of the innovacions to encourage innovators to invest capital in innovations and to get benefit about it.
Lots of innovations can help other companies or people to reduce their costs or increase their productivity, which help to increase their productivity, and in aggregate terms it can impulse an increase of the productivity of all the economy. <em>The consequence of the productivity increase is the grow of the economy.</em>
For example, the develop of the informatic and internet had helped to increase the productivity in all the global word. The government of innovatives countries helped to the global economy by guaranteeing the private rights of that innovators.
Answer:
I think its William Few, but i am not really sure. If its not him try Abraham Baldwin.
Explanation:
I searched many resources.
The Nazis advocated killing children of “unwanted” or “dangerous” groups either as part of the “racial struggle” or as a measure of preventative security. The Germans and their collaborators killed children for these ideological reasons and in retaliation for real or alleged partisan attacks.
Nazi Germany and its collaborators killed about 1.5 million Jewish children and tens of thousands of Romani (Gypsy) children, 5,000–7,000 German children with physical and mental disabilities living in institutions, as well as many Polish children and children residing in the German-occupied Soviet Union. Jewish and non-Jewish adolescents (13–18 years old) had a greater chance of survival, as they could be used for forced labor.
The fates of Jewish and non-Jewish children can be categorized in the following ways:
children killed when they arrived in killing centers
children killed immediately after birth or in institutions
children born in ghettos and camps who survived because prisoners hid them
children, usually over age 12, who were used as forced laborers and as subjects of medical experiments
children killed during reprisal operations or so-called anti-partisan operations.
Deportation of Jewish children from the Lodz ghetto, Poland, during the "Gehsperre" Aktion, September 1942. [LCID: 50365]