Question 1.1. (TCO 1) Which one of the following Windows NET commands options is not used to control services with the NET ????? ServiceName? (Points : 4) STOP START CONTINUE PAUSE DELETE Question 2.2. (TCO 1) The netsh command that will set the IP Address of the interface name "NIC" to 192.168.100.10 255.255.255.0 with a metric of 1 is _____. (Points : 4) netsh interface set ip address "NIC" source=static 192.168.100.10 255.255.255
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Chapter 27 Expenditure Multipliers Fixed Prices and Expenditure Plans • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Several factors influence consumption expenditure and saving. The most direct influence is disposable income‚ which is real GDP or aggregate income minus net taxes (taxes minus transfer payments). Planned consumption expenditure plus planned saving equals disposable income. The greater the disposable income‚ the greater is consumption expenditure and the greater is saving
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efficient use of limited productive resources to satisfy economic wants. | | | | issue of equality in the distribution of income and wealth among households. | | | | budget deficits in the domestic economy and trade deficits in the international economy. | | Instructor Explanation: | Chapter 1. | | | | Points Received: | 1 of 1 | | Comments: | | | | 2. | Question : | (TCO 1) The basic economic problem is essentially one of deciding how to make the best use of |
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Identify the 2 curves in question 2 which are positively sloped. Explain. (b) Identify which curve in question 2 is negatively sloped. Explain. (c) Identify which curve in question 2 has zero slope. Explain. 4. What does ceteris paribus mean? Why is the concept useful to economists? 5. Why does the distinction between a positive and a normative state matter for economics? 6. What is a model? Why do economists use models. 7. Why is the shape of the economy’s production possibility curve concave
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B Price Elasticity and Supply & Demand Xeco – 212 02/07/2012 Peter D. Brothers Fill in the matrix below and describe how changes in price or quantity of the goods and services affect either supply or demand and the equilibrium price. Use the graphs from your book and the Tomlinson video tutorials as a tool to help you answer questions about the changes in price and quantity Event | Market affected by event | Shift in supply‚ demand‚ or both. Explain your answer. | Change in equilibrium
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AGGREGATE DEMAND - the total spending on goods and services in a period of time at a given price level C + I + G + (X – M) C = Consumption o The total spending by consumers on domestic goods and services ▪ Durable goods: used by consumers over a period of time (i.e. cars‚ computers‚ mobile phones) ▪ Non – durable goods: used up immediately or over a short time span (i.e. rice‚ toilet paper‚ newspapers) o Causes of change in consumption ▪ Changes in income –
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Supply and Demand Simulation Paper ECO/365 Week 2 Individual Assignment February 25‚ 2013 Supply and Demand The analysis will identify two microeconomics and two macroeconomics principles or concepts from the simulation‚ and explain why each principle or concept is in the category of macroeconomics or microeconomics. The analysis will identify at least one shift of the supply curve‚ and one shift of the demand curve from the simulation and what causes the shifts. The analysis will show
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to Y = %∆X %∆Y PRICE ELASTICITY of DEMAND Definition: Price elasticity of demand is defined as the degree of responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good to a change in its price‚ ceteris paribus‚ when all other factors on buyers’ plans are being unchanged. Formula: Calculating Price Elasticity of Demand Price elasticity of demand = Percentage change in quantity demanded
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Supply‚ Demand‚ and Price Elasticity Paper – Rice. ECO / 212: Principle of Economics Week 2 Learning Team Assignment With the growing cultural diversity in the San Francisco bay area‚ it is hard not to notice the Asian cuisines and restaurants in every corner of the block. Asian food had become a natural substitution choice for the American fast food; and rice‚ is the perfect substitution for wheat and flour. Rice is the seed of the monocot plant “Oryza sativa”. As a cereal grain‚ it is the
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THE CLASSICAL ECONOMIST VIEW OF SUPPLY CREATES ITS OWN DEMAND IN THE NIGERIAN ECONOMY. The classical economists accepted Say’s Law of Markets‚ the doctrine of the French economist Jean Baptiste Say. Say’s law holds that the danger of general unemployment or “glut” in a competitive economy is negligible because supply tends to create its own matching demand up to the limit of human labour and the natural resources available for production. Each enlargement of output adds to
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