Why are firefighting services usually provided by the government and not by private firms? First of all‚ the fire services is a kind of public goods‚ public goods means the goods that no matter whether the individuals are willing to buy‚ each member of the whole society can benefit from. It is produced by the public sector or it is a product‚ provided by the government‚ that the private are unwilling or unable to manufacture‚ including international security‚ police‚ fire services‚ roads
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Law Firms and Electronic Communication Dealing with Cyberspace Annette Slaughter LES.330.DISB1T01.SP2011 February 23‚ 2011 Abstract In the world of litigation‚ it is a difficult enough task to wade through all the laws‚ acts and statutes that compose constitutional law. With the introduction of new technologies dealing with cyberspace‚ one of the issues laws firms have to contend with electronic communication. Electronic communication encompasses the areas of document review or electronic
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Firm Conduct in Structure Conduct Performance (SCP) Competitive market analysis normally involves some reference to the number and size distributions of firms‚ the types of product produced‚ the extent to which established firms control prices‚ the ease with which firms can enter or exit markets‚ and the ease with which information flows between firms and consumers and the resulting conditions facing both of these groups. The seminal writers in the field of industrial organization were Edward
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Erik Heritage English 102 Dr. Ramirez November 12‚ 2010 From Small Business to large Brand firm: New Jersey Wineries New Jersey wineries are well-medaled. Twenty three New Jersey wineries won nearly 250 medals and awards in competitions and taste testing’s against other domestic and international wines in 2010 alone. Pick a category‚ red‚ white or a dessert‚ and a wine from New Jersey beat a corporate winery with a largely known brand. Their products have proved to be better
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Why Do Firms Pay Dividends? International Evidence on the Determinants of Dividend Policy* DAVID J. DENIS** Krannert School of Management Purdue University West Lafayette‚ IN 47907 djdenis@purdue.edu IGOR OSOBOV Georgia State University Department of Finance Atlanta‚ GA 30303 iosobov@gsu.edu May‚ 2007 We thank Yakov Amihud‚ Harry DeAngelo‚ Linda DeAngelo‚ Diane Denis‚ Jim Hsieh‚ Omesh Kini‚ Erik Lie‚ John McConnell‚ Lalitha Naveen‚ Raghu Rau‚ Steve Smith‚ Jeff Wurgler‚ an anonymous referee
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41. State whether each of the following payments is a tax. Explain your answers. a. To incorporate his business‚ Alex pays the state of Texas a $2‚000 incorporation fee. The incorporation fee is not a tax. Alex receives a direct benefit from the payment of the fee - the privilege of operating his business as a corporation b. The city paves a road and assesses each property owner on the road $4‚000 for his or her share of the cost. The payment of the assessment is not a tax. The assessment
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2) Explain why a profit maximizing firm produces the output that equates marginal revenues to marginal costs (MR=MC). In a perfectly competitive market‚ producers are price-takers and consumers are price-takers. There are many producers‚ none having a large market share and the industry produces a standardized product‚ also free entry and exit of the industry. They produce using the optimal output rule: produce where marginal revenue equals marginal cost as Smith (1904) demonstrated. Figure
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Does Corporate Social Responsibility Affect Firms’ Performance?1 Laura Poddi2 Sergio Vergalli3 July 28‚ 2008 Abstract In the last two decades in the OECD countries there have been a raising development of firms certified as Social Responsible (CSR is the acronym of Corporate Social Responsibility). This kind of certification is assigned by private companies that guarantee that the behaviour of a certain firms environmentally and sociologically correct. Some papers (among others Preston
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UTILITY MAXIMIZATION We will examine the nature of consumer choices by working with a simple model in which the consumer DM chooses how to allocate their income M between two good X and Y. The kinds of choices we examine with this model can be quire general with X and Y varying from subjects as diverse as income versus leisure‚ consumption today versus consumption tomorrow‚ and different classes of consumption goods. The utility model has proven quire useful in a number of real world applications
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Why Japanese firms cannot attract talents from overseas: The consequence Japan faces from postwar economic growth Today‚ Japanese firms are in jeopardy of surviving. Due to the advent of globalization and the shrinking of the domestic market in Japan‚ it became essential for the firms to gain talents from overseas. However‚ it is a well-known fact that Japanese companies do not attract the foreign talents. Singapore is not an exception. In fact‚ none of the Japanese firms were included in Singapore’s
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