Question options :
a. raise both private and public saving.b. raise private saving and lower public saving.c. lower private saving and raise public saving.d. lower private and public saving.
Answer:
c. lower private saving and raise public saving.
Explanation:
National saving is total of private and public saving minus the country's consumption and government expenditure.
Private saving is income from households minus consumption and taxes.
Formula for public saving is T − G − TR which is government budget surplus through revenue from tax. This is revenue from tax minus government expenditure and transfers.
Solution:
Pick some smart number for x,
let x=2 (I chose x=2 as in this case monthly shipments would be X/2=1).
From January to April, inclusive 4x=8 brooms were produced and
in May the company paid for storage of 8-1 =7 brooms,
in next month for storage of 6 and so on.
So the total storage cost would be:
= 1 ∗ (7+6+5+4+3+2+1+0)
= 28
--> as x=2 , then 28 = 14x
So the answer is 14x
Answer:
Paying bills individually is more expensive
Explanation:
Paying bills by transaction is more expensive and a damaging to a person's financial health. Bill payment should be organized and planned to avoid unnecessary cost that comes with paying each bill individually.
Answer:
How would private property rights help explain why Taiwan is now so much wealthier than Liberia?
<em>Taiwan is so much wealthier than Liberia in terms of the use of Private property rights because the Taiwanese have many exportable products they have Private Property rights on. The Taiwanese started building from copying technologies of sub-standard goods to quality goods over the years of improvement while the Liberian fought a prolonged civil war without a change to produce products to have a Private Property right on.</em>
Explanation:
<em>The Book of Things</em><em> </em>in Taiwan Civil Code was overhauled between 2007 and 2010. This chapter coded the amendments and found:
(1). 97% of the proposals by the task force (composed of property scholars and judges) were accepted verbatim by the legislature;
(2). Property laws in Japan, Germany, and Switzerland heavily influenced this round of amendments. The (unconventional) story behind the legal changes is that scholars and judges are the <em>“interest group</em>” that drives these amendments.