Questions
Manifest Destiny.

Manifest Destiny. Describe the emergence of "Manifest Destiny" in the U.S. -tell us what it is, how it emerged, and explain how it impacted Native peoples in the U.S. (the Cherokee, Plains Indians, Native Peoples of the West,...) in the 19th century. Then explain how the U.S. came to take half of Mexico. Then tell us how the Mexican-American and Native American populations that lived in the territories that the U.S. took from Mexico in 1848 (California, New Mexico, Arizona, Texas...) fared after1848. Explain each part with specific examples

In: History

Many humans claim to have a “sweet tooth”. Yet, excess sugar is bad for our health....

Many humans claim to have a “sweet tooth”. Yet, excess sugar is bad for our health. Presumably, our craving for sweet food substrates has an evolutionary basis – it probably directed human ancestors to forage for fruit, not candy. What nutritional benefits (name at least three) do we get from fresh fruit? Why is the amount of sugar contained in a few pieces of fruit not bad for us? Given that most of the fruit matter (cell wall) is indigestible to us, what is the reason for ingesting cellulose?

In: Anatomy and Physiology

Until recently, the US Dollar had been appreciating. This was occurring as the growth rates of...

Until recently, the US Dollar had been appreciating. This was occurring as the growth rates of European and some Asian economies were slowing. Based on these two trends only, how would the rate of growth for the US economy change from its previous levels (provide your basis for this). What should the effect of these two factors be on interest rates, the S&P 500 index, and commodity prices (briefly provide your basis for each of these changes). DO NOT ASSUME ANY ACTIONS BY THE FEDERAL RESERVE IN FORMULATING YOUR ANSWER.


In: Economics

Conduct a SWOT analysis for Korean red ginseng extract from CheongKwanJang and include a summary/explanation of...

Conduct a SWOT analysis for Korean red ginseng extract from CheongKwanJang and include a summary/explanation of the SWOT for the product as if you were researching the possibility of promoting it to native US consumers. Your “starting” market will be US citizens. Your target market should be much smaller than this.

Use your SWOT analysis and put together S and O to determine actions moving forward to help propel your marketing opportunities. Use W and T to determine what pitfalls you may experience down the road.

In: Economics

One of the shortcomings of monetary policy is the problem with timelags. This is a problem...

One of the shortcomings of monetary policy is the problem with timelags. This is a problem because:

Non banks can make loans as well as member banks over time

It takes time for the US senate to approve the FED changes

It takes time for the FED to get approval of it’s actions from the US President

After the FED takes an action it may take years for the discount rate and Fed funds rate to change

After the FED takes an action it could be months or even years before the changes impacted our macroeconomic economy

In: Economics

Until recently, the US Dollar had been appreciating. This was occurring as the growth rates of...

  1. Until recently, the US Dollar had been appreciating. This was occurring as the growth rates of European and some Asian economies were slowing. Based on these two trends only, how would the rate of growth for the US economy change from its previous levels (provide your basis for this). What should the effect of these two factors be on interest rates, the S&P 500 index, and commodity prices (briefly provide your basis for each of these changes). DO NOT ASSUME ANY ACTIONS BY THE FEDERAL RESERVE IN FORMULATING YOUR ANSWER.

In: Economics

Microsoft in 2005 As their 2005 fiscal year came to a close, Bill Gates and Steve...

Microsoft in 2005

As their 2005 fiscal year came to a close, Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer could reflect on the last year as well as the previous five years—with mixed emotions. Microsoft had slowed down after two decades of spectacular growth in revenues, profits, and stock price (see Exhibits 1, 2, and 3). Although Microsoft remained one of the most valuable and profitable companies in the world, its two core products, Windows and Office, had been experiencing anemic growth in revenues and profits. Moreover, competing software, such as the Linux operating system, and the rising popularity of search engines like Google, were posing new threats to Microsoft’s franchise.

On the positive side, Microsoft had the strongest balance sheet of any company in the world. Management was committed to aggressive reinforcement of its core businesses, including significant investments in new operating systems and Web services, as well as ongoing investments in new businesses, ranging from Xbox to Business Solutions. Perhaps most importantly, Microsoft had settled many of its public and private lawsuits on reasonably favorable terms by 2005 (see Exhibit 4).

One of the most daunting challenges was how to reposition Microsoft for modern times. When Gates started the company in 1975, he proclaimed that the mission of Microsoft was “to place a PC running Microsoft software on every desk and in every home.” When Gates reflected on Microsoft strategy with the casewriters in the mid-1990s, he further articulated this view:

We look for opportunities with network externalities—where there are advantages to the vast majority of consumers to share a common standard. We look for businesses where we can garner large market shares, not just 30%–35%. But at the same time, we are not a software conglomerate. The key to our business is building annuities, by tapping into the broad revenue streams that will rely on our software expertise.1[A1]

In 2005, 30 years after Microsoft was founded, the company had a new vision statement: to be “the worldwide leader in software, services and solutions that help people and businesses realize their full potential.” Gates remained the company visionary as well as its chairman and chief software architect. However, it was CEO Ballmer, Gates’s friend from his freshman days at Harvard, who was now leading the charge. While Ballmer was forcefully driving the company forward, the big question remained: Would these efforts allow Microsoft to repeat its previous spectacular successes, or would the future belong to a new generation of leaders?[A2]

The Early Microsoft Years (1975–1990)

Gates and his high school friend, Paul Allen, founded Microsoft in 1975, and the company’s first product was a condensed version of the BASIC programming language for the first personal computer (PC). Over the next few years, Microsoft developed numerous versions of other programming languages, becoming the leading distributor of software development tools. But Microsoft’s big break came in 1980, when IBM asked Gates to provide the operating system (OS) for its new PC. Rather than develop an OS from scratch, Gates bought an existing OS from a local programmer for $50,000 and tailored his new product, called MS-DOS, to work exclusively with Intel microprocessors—the “brains” of the IBM PC. By 1984, MS-DOS had achieved an 85% market share, pushing Microsoft sales over $100 million. When Gates took the company public in 1986, the stock price tripled within a year, making Gates a billionaire at the age of 31.

During the 1980s, Microsoft was already trying to expand beyond MS-DOS. As early as 1981, Microsoft began work on a graphical user interface (GUI) called Windows, shipping version 1.0 in 1985. At the same time, Microsoft worked with IBM to develop a totally new OS called OS/2. The first “killer apps” in the software industry—applications that everyone wanted—came from two of the larger independent software vendors (ISVs), Lotus and WordPerfect. Microsoft was originally seen as an imitator with second-rate products. Early releases were especially derided. Industry pundits joked about never buying a Microsoft product called “1.0.”

Ironically, Microsoft’s greatest success in the 1980s outside of its OS came from recognizing the potential of the Apple Macintosh and choosing to write applications for the Apple OS. While major ISVs largely ignored the Mac, Microsoft became the dominant supplier of Macintosh word processing and spreadsheet software. Microsoft’s familiarity with developing applications for the Macintosh helped it develop Windows, which used a Mac-like GUI that took the market by storm.

Application Software

Application software had a very different business model from that of OSes. While OSes were sold mainly through hardware OEMs, applications were sold through a myriad of channels, including computer companies, corporate site licenses, various retail channels, and after the mid- 1990s the Internet. The key for successful OS vendors was to build close relationships with ISVs to produce as many applications as possible on their OS. Though ISVs did not have access to the proprietary source code for the Microsoft OS, they did have access to “hooks,” called application program interfaces (APIs), by which they could take advantage of various OS features. Successful ISVs, in turn, competed on software features, customer service, shelf space/availability, and price. Since 1990, most PC application programs, which previously sold for hundreds of dollars, had by 2005 dropped to an average of less than $40.

Until the advent of Windows, customers would typically choose a software application and then stick with it. Training workers to use a new spreadsheet or word processor once cost up to five times as much as the program itself. For productivity application vendors, such as Lotus and WordPerfect, their large customer base and high switching costs led to very profitable operations. Over the 1990s, however, Lotus, WordPerfect, Borland, and others found their businesses under pressure. First, the cost of producing a major software program grew from a few hundred thousand dollars to more than

$10 million. Second, by providing standard interfaces and file formats, Windows reduced customers’ switching costs from five times to roughly twice the cost of the application. And third, after Windows took off, Microsoft itself became the world’s largest PC application vendor.

Microsoft’s success in PC applications began in the late 1980s when it pursued a new paradigm. To induce customers to switch from their favorite applications, such as WordPerfect and Lotus 1-2-3, Microsoft was the first to offer a bundle, or suite, of applications at a discounted price. Microsoft also began offering “competitive upgrades,” a sales program whereby Lotus 1-2-3 or WordPerfect customers could switch to Microsoft for a significantly discounted price.7 Part of Microsoft’s success with Windows applications was the result of competitors’ mistakes. While Lotus and WordPerfect matched Microsoft’s competitive upgrade pricing, they were initially reluctant to write for Windows and even slower to create their own bundles. As a result, Word and Excel were the best products on the Windows platform, and by the mid-1990s, Excel was outselling Lotus by 2 to 1 and Word soon dominated WordPerfect.8 Furthermore, as competitors played catch-up by increasing their Windows development efforts, they furthered the success of Microsoft’s Windows operating system. By 1995, many ISVs, except for Microsoft, had completely abandoned Macintosh development.

Microsoft’s stand-alone products ranged from Money (financial management) and Project (project management) to Flight Simulator (a popular computer game). However, specialized ISVs were able to dominate most of the niche application markets. For example, Intuit was the dominant provider of financial management and tax software, Adobe’s PageMaker was preeminent in desktop publishing, and Autodesk’s AutoCAD was the lead vendor in computer-aided design (CAD).

Applications software accounted for about one-third of Microsoft’s total sales in 2005, after peaking at around 60% in the mid-1990s. Microsoft had captured 90% of the market for productivity software applications in 1995. Its market share then rose to around 95% by 1998, with Corel’s WordPerfect Suite and IBM’s Lotus Suite carving up the remaining scraps. Yet despite Microsoft’s great success, application revenues were under pressure. Revenue from stand-alone versions of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint had been in a steady decline since around 1995 as the Office Suite gradually absorbed each of these individual markets. Microsoft acknowledged that this trend exerted a steady downward pressure on prices because Office sold for less than the sum of the individual programs. Second, upgrades (rather than new sales) were taking a larger share of revenue, and upgrades had lower margins than new products.9 Moreover, industry wisdom held that 80% of customers used less than 20% of the features.

USE THE ABOVE SCENARIO TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS

How did Microsoft use bundling to price discriminate? Use specific cited examples. How did Microsoft build revenues so fast? Be specific in your details. What are three big threats to Microsoft's success? Be specific and explain the details and impacts of each threat.

In: Operations Management

salim, mohammed and khalid are three individuals who come from the same background and are as...

salim, mohammed and khalid are three individuals who come from the same background and are as fast friends. As normal individuals in an economy, they earn money and spend the same on leading good lives. They are tax payers of a country with annual income of 20000, 29000 and 34000 respectively. A standard assumption is that all the three individuals spend approximately 12000 on purchase of essentials. These essentials are subject to sales tax.

Based on the above case you are required to:

I) Calculate the tax being paid by each individual under a, b, c and d scenarios.
II) Comment in detail (using calculations from I) about features and effects of each of the given tax structures on individuals and on the economy.​​​
III) Comment giving justification as to which tax structure (a, b or c) would be the most beneficial to a country.​​​​​​​


TAX STRUCTURE


A) The country follows a flat tax rate of 18%
B) The country follows a tax rate as follows:
​ Up to ​3499​​Nil
​3500 – 7999​​5 %
​8000- 20999​​15%
​21000 – 32999​25%
​Above 33000​​35%
C) The country follows a dual tax rate system as follows
​​Up to 17500​​12%
​​17500 and above​18%
D) The Sales tax rate in the country is 11%​​​​.

In: Accounting

munire, Ahmed and maryam are three individuals who come from the same background and are as...

munire, Ahmed and maryam are three individuals who come from the same background and are as fast friends. As normal individuals in an economy, they earn money and spend the same on leading good lives .They are tax payers of a country with annual income of 26000, 39000 and 44000 respectively. A standard assumption is that all the three individuals spend approximately 12000 on purchase of essentials. These essentials are subject to sales tax. Based on the above case you are required to:

I) Calculate the tax being paid by each individual under a, b, c and d scenarios.

II) Comment in detail (using calculations from I) about features and effects of each of the given tax structures on individuals and on the economy.​​​

III) Comment giving justification as to which tax structure (a, b or c) would be the most beneficial to a country.​​​​​​​

TAX STRUCTURE

a) The country follows a flat tax rate of 15%.

b) The country follows a tax rate as follows:

​ Upto ​7499​​Nil
​7500 – 12999​​5 %
​13000- 23999​​10%
​24000 – 39999​20%
​Above 40000​​30%
c) The country follows a dual tax rate system as follows
​​Up to 24000​​10%
​​24000 and above​20%

d) The Sales tax rate in the country is 9%​
​​

In: Accounting

Pharoah Co. follows the practice of valuing its inventory at the lower-of-cost-or-market. The following information is...

Pharoah Co. follows the practice of valuing its inventory at the lower-of-cost-or-market. The following information is available from the company’s inventory records as of December 31, 2020.

Item

Quantity

Unit Cost

Replacement
Cost/Unit

Estimated Selling
Price/Unit

Completion & Disposal
Cost/Unit

Normal Profit
Margin/Unit

A 1,500 $8.40 $9.41 $11.76 $1.68 $2.02
B 1,200 9.18 8.85 10.53 1.01 1.34
C 1,400 6.27 6.05 8.06 1.29 0.67
D 1,400 4.26 4.70 7.06 0.90 1.68
E 1,800 7.17 7.06 7.50 0.78 1.12

Greg Forda is an accounting clerk in the accounting department of Pharoah Co., and he cannot understand why the market value keeps changing from replacement cost to net realizable value to something that he cannot even figure out. Greg is very confused, and he is the one who records inventory purchases and calculates ending inventory. You are the manager of the department and an accountant.

(a)

Calculate the lower-of-cost-or-market using the individual-item approach.

Lower-of-Cost-or-Market
(Per unit basis)

Item A $
Item B $
Item C $
Item D $
Item E $

In: Accounting