Yes it can be applied.
If an investor is pessimistic that a certain risk that they fear will occur, they avoid investing in the fields prone to the risk.
For example, if an investor is offered an opportunity in the oil and flammable fuels and the persons dreads fire, that person declines the offer no matter how viable it is.
Sharon and two kids makes 3 people total with both kids being under 18, the poverty level from the table is $20,231
She gets $1000 a month for her kids. 1000 x 12 months = $12,000 per year
12,000 + her annual salary = 12,000 + 16,000 = $28,000 per year.
28,000 is greater than 20,231 so she is not living in poverty.
The answer is no
The answer is B Market Basket.
Answer:
The correct answer is c. 80%
Explanation:
How to calculate the quality of fill.
Quality of fill= (Job Performance + acceptable time frame + Engagement score)/N
Job Performance we use it en percentage , so is 80% (4.0/5.0)
Engagement score is the percentage of new hires retained after one year
Replacing,
Quality of fill= 0.8+0.7+0.9 /3= 0.8
The long run will see the supply curve of a completive firm changing to the b. portion of the marginal-cost curve that lies above the average-total-cost curve.
<h3>What is the long-run supply curve in a perfect competition?</h3>
In a perfect competition, a company will only produce goods and services at a level where the marginal cost curve is above the average total cost in the long run.
This means that the supply curve will be the marginal cost curve but only the portion of this curve that is above the long-run average total cost curve.
The reason for this is that in the long-run., all the costs in a perfectly competitive firm are considered variable and so they can afford to avoid supply mishaps in the short term.
In conclusion, option B is correct.
Find out more on the long-run supply curve at brainly.com/question/15869064
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