Questions
Q2. If C=700+0.8Yd, I= 400, Tax=10%, & G= 200, then: (A) Derive equation for AD (B)...

Q2. If C=700+0.8Yd, I= 400, Tax=10%, & G= 200, then:

(A) Derive equation for AD
(B) Determine equilibrium value of output.

(C) Calculate value of multiplier

(D) Repeat first 3 parts if Govt. spending is increased to 300
(E) Show changes through graph.

In: Economics

Arrange the following in the decreasing order (most important first) of their importance, for the welfare...

Arrange the following in the decreasing order (most important first) of their importance, for the welfare of human society. Give reasons for your answer. Biogas, citric acid, penicillin and curd.

In: Biology

For each of the following, indicate whether the idea is most closely associated with the first...

For each of the following, indicate whether the idea is most closely associated with the first industrial revolution, the second industrial revolution, neither, or both.

Question 1 options:

1

Railroads

12

Time zones

3

The steam engine

4

Steam boats

5

Mechanization

5

Telegraph

6

A technological (as opposed to political) revolution

7

The internet

8

The possibility of traveling from coast to coast in the US in under a week

1.

First Industrial Revolution

2.

Second Industrial Revolution

3.

Neither

4.

Both

In: Economics

For each of the following, indicate whether the idea is most closely associated with the first...

For each of the following, indicate whether the idea is most closely associated with the first industrial revolution, the second industrial revolution, neither, or both.

Question 1 options:

1234

Steam boats

1234

Time zones

1234

The internet

1234

Railroads

1234

The steam engine

1234

Mechanization

1234

Telegraph

1234

The possibility of traveling from coast to coast in the US in under a week

1234

A technological (as opposed to political) revolution

1.

First Industrial Revolution

2.

Second Industrial Revolution

3.

Neither

4.

Both

In: Economics

Europe struggled with high levels of violence that raged for most of the first half of...

Europe struggled with high levels of violence that raged for most of the first half of the twentieth century. In spite of that, Europe has achieved the most advanced level of integration of any regional grouping. Discuss the problems of regional integration agreements that potentially occur even when all sides want to reach agreement.

In: Economics

What is the magnitude of the relativistic momentum of a proton with a relativistic total energy...

What is the magnitude of the relativistic momentum of a proton with a relativistic total energy of 3.8 × 10-10 J?

In: Physics

Question: Why does Kennedy expect a ‘U’ shaped recovery rather than a ‘V’ shaped recovery? In...

Question: Why does Kennedy expect a ‘U’ shaped recovery rather than a ‘V’ shaped recovery? In your answer explain the difference between the two types of recoveries.

Although the virus has delayed the budget until October …. last week the secretary to the Treasury dropped some big hints on what to expect. In evidence to the Senate committee inquiring into the response to the virus, Dr Steven Kennedy started with the outlook for the labour market. The latest figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics are for the four weeks up to mid-April. In round figures, they show that 900,000 people lost their jobs during the period (although 300,000 gained jobs), 1 million people worked fewer hours and three-quarters of a million kept their jobs but worked no hours (most of them protected by the JobKeeper wage subsidy scheme). So that’s a total of 2.7 million workers – about one worker in five - adversely affected by the snap recession. Total employment fell by 4.6 per cent, but total hours fell by twice that – 9.2 per cent, telling us much of the pain was borne by part-time workers. The rate of underemployment (mainly part-timers working fewer hours than they want to) leapt by almost 5 percentage points to 13.7 per cent. The “good” news is, Kennedy thinks that’s most of the collapse in employment we’re likely to see. We may get a bit more in the figures for May, and maybe even a fraction more in June. But that should be it. The trick, however, is that though the underlying position won’t be getting much worse, we’ll see the rate of unemployment shooting up. It had risen by “only” 1 percentage point to 6.2 per cent by mid-April, but Kennedy expects it to be closer to 10 per cent by mid-June. (And it would have gone a lot higher but for the JobKeeper scheme.) Such a strange outcome – it’s not actually getting much worse, but the unemployment rate is rocketing – is explained by the strange nature of this “coronacession”: a recession caused by the government, acting under doctors’ orders. 3 Econ1007 Macroeconomics Assignment SP5 2020 In an ordinary recession, almost all the people who lost their jobs in April would have immediately started looking for a new one, and so met the bureau’s tight definition of being unemployed. This time, most people didn’t start looking because many potential employers had been ordered to cease trading and, in any case, you and I had been ordered to stay in our homes and rarely come out. As the lockdown is eased, however, people will start actively looking for work, and the bureau will change their status from “not in the labour force” to unemployed, making the figures look a lot worse. On Wednesday, the bureau will publish the “national accounts”, showing what happened to real gross domestic product – the change in the economy’s production of goods and services – during the March quarter. [Note, GDP fell 0.3% in the March quarter- MS.] Kennedy is expecting real GDP to have fallen a bit, mainly because of the bushfires and the ban on entry to Australia by foreign tourists and overseas students. He’s expecting the big fall to come in the June quarter, and for the combined fall since December to be as much as 10 per cent. If it’s anything like that big it will be humongous. The total contraction in the last recession, in the early 1990s, was just 1.5 per cent. But, as with the job figures, Kennedy is expecting the contraction in GDP to end with the June quarter. The big question is, what happens after that? With most of the economy reopened – but, of course, our borders still closed to international travel – will most of us be back at work and producing and spending almost as normal? That is, will the period of the economy dropping like a stone be followed by it bouncing back like a rubber ball, producing a graph that looks like a big V? No. Kennedy told the Senate committee “I’m not predicting a V-shaped recovery in any sense, but the way we entered this [downturn], and the nature of this shock, give me some hope that if governments respond well, particularly through their fiscal levers [that is, their budgets], we needn’t have what’s called the L-shaped recovery”. That is, economic activity drops a long way, but stays there without growing. Kennedy says the L-shape is probably what people would think of as more like a depression. Kennedy noted that, according to separate figures from the bureau, the number of jobs in the accommodation and food sector fell by more than 25 per cent in just the three weeks to April 4, while jobs in the arts and recreation services sector fell by almost 19 per cent. He drew some hope from the fact that the sectors worst affected by the lockdown are “quite dynamic”. “They’re sectors that have high turnover in businesses coming and going, quite high turnover in employees and a lot of casuals,” he said. So, in the right conditions, they had the potential to re-establish quickly. In contrast, it was hard to re-establish a manufacturing plant quickly. In this strange recession, manufacturing, construction and mining had been allowed to continue without much disruption. If you rule out V-shaped and L-shaped recoveries, what’s left is a U-shape. You go down fast but bounce along the bottom before going back up. But our success in suppressing the virus means we’ve been able to start dismantling the lockdown earlier than the six months initially expected. “So in some ways we’re actually a little more optimistic [than we were] – maybe we just squeeze the U together a bit,” he said. That’s looking at our domestic economy. Looking at the prospects for the global economy, it’s possibly worse than he first thought. But even here Kennedy finds some source of hope. It so happens that our major trading partners – China, South Korea and Japan – are among the countries that have done better at beating the virus and getting back to work.

In: Economics

Exercise 7-5 Manufacturing Overhead Budget [LO7-6] The direct labor budget of Yuvwell Corporation for the upcoming...

Exercise 7-5 Manufacturing Overhead Budget [LO7-6]

The direct labor budget of Yuvwell Corporation for the upcoming fiscal year contains the following details concerning budgeted direct labor-hours:

1st Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter 4th Quarter
  Budgeted direct labor-hours 8,200 8,300 8,600 8,000

The company’s variable manufacturing overhead rate is $2.25 per direct labor-hour and the company’s fixed manufacturing overhead is $50,000 per quarter. The only noncash item included in fixed manufacturing overhead is depreciation, which is $12,500 per quarter.


Required:
1.

Complete the company’s manufacturing overhead budget for the upcoming fiscal year.

Yuvwell Corporation
Manufacturing Overhead Budget
1st Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter 4th Quarter Year
Variable manufacturing overhead
Fixed manufacturing overhead
Total manufacturing overhead
Less depreciation
Cash disbursements for manufacturing overhead
2.

Compute the company's manufacturing overhead rate (including both variable and fixed manufacturing overhead) for the upcoming fiscal year.

Total budgeted manufacturing overhead for the year
Budgeted direct labor-hours for the year
Predetermined overhead rate per hour for the year

please show the work

Exercise 7-6 Selling and Administrative Expense Budget [LO7-7]

The budgeted unit sales of Weller Company for the upcoming fiscal year are provided below:

1st Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter 4th Quarter
  Budgeted unit sales 33,000 35,000 26,000 31,000

The company’s variable selling and administrative expense per unit is $3.20. Fixed selling and administrative expenses include advertising expenses of $10,000 per quarter, executive salaries of $53,000 per quarter, and depreciation of $32,000 per quarter. In addition, the company will make insurance payments of $5,000 in the first quarter and $5,000 in the third quarter. Finally, property taxes of $9,200 will be paid in the second quarter.

  

Required:

Prepare the company’s selling and administrative expense budget for the upcoming fiscal year. (Round "Variable cost" answers to 2 decimal places.)

Weller Company
Selling and Administrative Expense Budget
1st Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter 4th Quarter Year
Fixed selling and administrative expenses:
Total fixed selling and administrative expenses
Total selling and administrative expenses
Cash disbursements for selling and administrative expenses

Exercise 7-7 Cash Budget [LO7-8]

Garden Depot is a retailer that is preparing its budget for the upcoming fiscal year. Management has prepared the following summary of its budgeted cash flows:


1st Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter 4th Quarter
  Total cash receipts $220,000     $370,000     $250,000     $270,000    
  Total cash disbursements $288,000     $258,000     $248,000     $268,000    


The company’s beginning cash balance for the upcoming fiscal year will be $28,000. The company requires a minimum cash balance of $10,000 and may borrow any amount needed from a local bank at a quarterly interest rate of 3%. The company may borrow any amount at the beginning of any quarter and may repay its loans, or any part of its loans, at the end of any quarter. Interest payments are due on any principal at the time it is repaid. For simplicity, assume that interest is not compounded.


Required:

Complete the company's cash budget for the upcoming fiscal year. (Cash deficiencies, disbursements, repayments, and interest should be indicated by a minus sign.)

Garden Depot
Cash Budget
1st Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter 4th Quarter Year
Beginning cash balance
Total cash receipts
Total cash available
Less total cash disbursements
Excess of cash available over disbursements
Financing:
Borrowings
Repayments
Interest
Total financing
Ending cash balance

Exercise 7-8 Budgeted Income Statement [LO7-9]

Gig Harbor Boating is the wholesale distributor of a small recreational catamaran sailboat. Management has prepared the following summary data to use in its annual budgeting process:


  Budgeted unit sales 780
  Selling price per unit $2,110
  Cost per unit $1,615
  Variable selling and administrative expenses (per unit) $55
  Fixed selling and administrative expenses (per year) $300,000
  Interest expense for the year $27,000


Required:

Prepare the company’s budgeted income statement using an absorption income statement format.

Gig Harbor Boating
Budgeted Income Statement
0
0
$0

In: Accounting

Why are water tables dropping around the world? What are some negative impacts of falling water...

Why are water tables dropping around the world? What are some negative impacts of falling water tables?

In: Biology

identify the key issues of Falling Oil Prices in their Long-term and Short-term Impact on the...

identify the key issues of Falling Oil Prices in their Long-term and Short-term Impact on the Ordinary Investor

In: Accounting