Answer:
1. Giving employers the right and the necessary tools they need to make good business decisions that can improve the company's efficiency.
2. Reward outstanding achievements and encourage everyone to think outside the box as well as being productive.
3. Creating a challenging and interactive environment for everyone.
4. Inspiring everyone to do their best and let them know that they will certainly be rewarded.
Explanation:
Giving employers the right and the necessary tools they need to make good business decisions that can improve the company's efficiency. Reward outstanding achievements and encourage everyone to think outside the box as well as being productive. Creating a challenging and interactive environment for everyone. Inspiring everyone to do their best and let them know that they will certainly be rewarded.
Answer: Explanation:
The marginal rate of substitution of peaches for avocados is the maximum amount of avocados that a person is willing to give up to obtain one additional peach. When consumers maximize utility, they set their MRS equal to the price ratio, Pp/PA
where
,
P
p is the price of a peach and
PA is the price of an avocado.
In Georgia, avocados cost twice as much as peaches, so the price ratio is ½ , but in California, the prices are the same, so the price ratio is 1. Therefore, when consumers are maximizing utility (assuming they buy positive amounts of both goods), the marginal rates of substitution will not be the same for consumers in both states. Consumers in California will have an MRS that is twice as large as consumers in Georgia.
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The correct option is B - Opportunity Cost
<u>Explanation:</u>
Generally, an opportunity cost is the benefit that you gave up when you pass on that option in favor of another option. For instance, by choosing to purchase furniture instead of taking a vacation comes at the cost of not experiencing the relaxation and fun associated with a vacation. All options have opportunity costs (getting married instead of staying single, investing in school instead of retirement, etc).
Everyone should know that opportunity cost is a very important concept that doesn’t just have its application in economics; you can apply it to all aspects of your daily life. Whether you’re cooking, eating, playing soccer, going to the movies, or hitting the gym, so long as you’re breathing, evaluating the choices you’re presented with is an inevitability, whether conscious of it or not.