A Theory of the Allocation of Time Gary S. Becker The Economic Journal‚ Vol. 75‚ No. 299. (Sep.‚ 1965)‚ pp. 493-517. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0013-0133%28196509%2975%3A299%3C493%3AATOTAO%3E2.0.CO%3B2-N The Economic Journal is currently published by Royal Economic Society. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR ’s Terms and Conditions of Use‚ available at http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html. JSTOR ’s Terms and Conditions of Use provides‚ in part
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Revenue allocation formulae: The current revenue allocation formulae is 52.68%‚ 26.72% and 20.60%.for the F.G‚ States and L.Gs respectively | FEDERAL GOVT. | STATE GOVT. | LOCAL GOVT. | | | | | |52.68% |26.72%
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of fraudulent acts committed by those of high status within their respective corporations‚ most of which involve internal fraud. Internal fraud has two main aspects‚ misappropriation of assets and fraudulent financial reporting‚ with the focus of this discussion lying within the former. Misappropriation of assets is defined as fraud for personal gain. It is the most common type of fraud found among employees and frequently includes theft of cash and inventory. Misappropriation of asserts‚ better
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Allocation of Fixed Costs ACC 403 Principles of Accounting The articles describe two different approaches: Lean accounting and activity based costing. Both have pros and cons and the selection of "what is best for allocating IT" likely rests with the culture and types of businesses. I personally believe that activity-based costing‚ which essentially casts IT as a variable cost‚ making users sensitive to the requests they make of IT because every request is an incremental cost to their
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Resource Allocation Paper Jody Bryant‚ Vann Haigler‚ Rose Matos‚ and James Sampson University of Phoenix Mark Fechtel May 25‚ 2006 Resource Allocation Paper Project management is the discipline of defining and achieving targets while optimizing the use of resources: time‚ money‚ people‚ materials‚ energy‚ space‚ etc.‚ over the course of a project. The most important resources that project managers have to plan and manage on day-to-day basis are people‚ materials
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/Contiguous file allocation/ #include<stdio.h> Int main() { char a[10][10]; int I‚flb[10]‚sb[10]; for(i=1;i<=5;i++) { printf(“\nEnter the file name:”); scanf(“%s”‚&a); printf(“\nEnter the starting block:”); scanf(“%d”‚&sb[i]); printf(“\nEnter the file length in blocks:”); scanf(“%d”‚&flb[i]); } printf(“\n\nList of files\tstarting block\tfile length”); for(i=0;i<5;i++) { printf(“\n%s\t%d\t%d”‚a[i]‚sb[i]‚flb[i]); } return 1; } /indexed allocation/ #include<stdio
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Understanding Asset Swaps Learning Curve Richard Pereira September 2003 2 Asset swaps Asset swaps combine an interest-rate swap with a bond and are seen as both cash market instruments and also as credit derivatives. They are used to alter the cash flow profile of a bond. The asset swap market is an important segment of the credit derivatives market since it explicitly sets out the price of credit as a spread over Libor. Pricing a bond by reference to Libor is commonly used and the spread over
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SID: 310196302 Room: Storie Dixon 4 (N431) Time: Thursday 5pm Executive Summary Asset securitization played a crucial role in the onset of the 2007-2008 sub-prime mortgage crisis‚ which inevitably aided in the creation of the worst economic conditions since the Great Depression. The nature and structure of securitized assets was not however what directly contributed to the Global Financial Crisis. These assets were reasonably new to the financial institutions and there was a limited understanding
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required rate of return Answer: a. Required return 0.05 1.8 (0.10 0.05) 0.05 0.09 0.14 b. Required return 0.05 1.8 (0.13 0.05) 0.05 0.144 0.194 c. Although the risk-free rate does not change‚ as the market return increases‚ the required return on the asset rises by 180% of the change in the market’s return. P8-1. Solutions to Problems Rate of return: rt = LG 1; Basic a. Investment X: Return Investment Y: Return ($21‚000 $20‚000 $1‚500) 12.50% $20‚000 ($55‚000 $55‚000 $6‚800) 12.36% $55‚000
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........... 2 Background .............................................................. 2 Risk Assessment ....................................................... 2 Portfolio Selection Analysis ...................................... 3 Optimal Asset Allocation.......................................... 4 Recommendations.................................................... 4 References ................................................................ 5 Exhibit 1........................................
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