subject
Business, 19.01.2021 22:20 khamyah96

Lee's company of nine workers produces 150 units of a product with a marginal cost of $10 for the last unit. The product sells for $12 per unit. If Lee adds one additional worker, the marginal cost would be $13. In this case, Lee should...

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on Business

question
Business, 21.06.2019 13:00
2. explain two ways that an informational interview is different from a job interview 3. describe two ways that an informational interview would be a benefit to you. 4. write two questions that you would ask in an informational interview. answer all in complete sentences for brainliest!
Answers: 3
question
Business, 22.06.2019 09:40
As related to a company completing the purchase to pay process, is there an accounting journal entry "behind the scenes" when xyz company pays for the goods within 10 days of the invoice (gross method is used for discounts and terms are 2/10 net 30) that updates the general ledger?
Answers: 3
question
Business, 23.06.2019 02:00
You are considering the purchase of one of two machines used in your manufacturing plant. machine 1 has a life of two years, costs $20,000 initially, and then $4,000 per year in maintenance costs. machine 2 costs $25,000 initially, has a life of three years, and requires $3,500 in annual maintenance costs. either machine must be replaced at the end of its life with an equivalent machine. using eac which is the better machine for the firm
Answers: 1
question
Business, 23.06.2019 17:30
Why is the cournot equilibrium an​ equilibrium? a. there are​ short-run barriers to exit in a cournot​ duopoly, so both firms cannot alter their output levels. b. given the other​ firm's level of​ production, both firms are maximizing profits and cannot improve their situation by unilaterally altering their level of output. c. both firms operate at zero profit under a cournot​ equilibrium, so they would face negative profits if they change output. d. both firms operate at minimum​ long-run average cost under a cournot​ equilibrium, so changes to output would reduce​ long-run profits. even if they​ can't collude, why​ don't firms set their outputs at the joint​ profit-maximizing levels​ (i.e., the levels they would have chosen had they​ colluded)? a. given that other firm produces at the collusive​ level, a firm could increase their own profits by increasing output above the collusive level. b. the midpoint of the collusion curve​ (i.e., the collusive​ outcome) lies below the reaction​ curves, so both firms have an incentive to increase output under the cournot duopoly. c. both a and b are correct d. both a and b are incorrect
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Lee's company of nine workers produces 150 units of a product with a marginal cost of $10 for the la...
Questions
Questions on the website: 13722363