subject
Business, 11.07.2019 21:00 sebby33

Suppose the manufacturer of dove soap sells the soap to wal-mart for $50 a case and to target for $60 a case. it does not cost the manufacturer of dove soap more to serve target's needs than it costs to serve wal-mart's needs. this practice, called price discrimination, is illegal under the:

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on Business

question
Business, 21.06.2019 21:30
Alandowner entered into a written agreement with a real estate broker whereby the broker would receive a commission of 10% of the sale price if he procured a "ready, willing, and able buyer" for the landowner's property and if the sale actually proceeded through closing. the broker found a buyer who agreed in writing to buy the property from the landowner for $100,000, the landowner's asking price. the buyer put up $6,000 as a down payment. the agreement between the landowner and the buyer contained a liquidated damages clause providing that, if the buyer defaulted by failing to tender the balance due of $94,000 at the closing date, damages would be 10% of the purchase price. the landowner included that clause because she was counting on using the proceeds of the sale for a business venture that would likely net her at least $10,000. the buyer became seriously ill and defaulted. when he recovered, he demanded that the landowner return his $6,000, and the landowner refused. the broker also demanded the $6,000 from the landowner and was refused. the broker and the buyer filed separate suits against the landowner, with the buyer pleading impossibility of performance. the two cases are consolidated into a single case. how should the court rule as to the disposition of the $6,000?
Answers: 3
question
Business, 22.06.2019 09:30
Stock market crashes happen when the value of most of the stocks in the stock market increase at the same time. question 10 options: true false
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 09:40
The wall street journal reported that walmart stores inc. is planning to lay off 2,300 employees at its sam's club warehouse unit. approximately half of the layoffs will be hourly employees (the wall street journal, january 25-26, 2014). suppose the following data represent the percentage of hourly employees laid off for 15 sam's club stores. 55 56 44 43 44 56 60 62 57 45 36 38 50 69 65 (a) compute the mean and median percentage of hourly employees being laid off at these stores. (b) compute the first and third quartiles. (c) compute the range and interquartile range. (d) compute the variance and standard deviation. (e) do the data contain any outliers? (f) based on the sample data, does it appear that walmart is meeting its goal for reducing the number of hourly employees?
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 21:00
There is just one person in our group, silvia, who seems to have radically different ideas about how to complete our project. she seems to purposely disagree with the majority opinions of the rest of us though yesterday she said something that made a lot of sense to us solve our production problem. i suggested to the entire group today that we hear silvia’s suggestions and asked silvia to share in-depth more of what she said yesterday. i am using which adaptive leader behavior?
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
Suppose the manufacturer of dove soap sells the soap to wal-mart for $50 a case and to target for $6...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 25.03.2020 08:22
Questions on the website: 13722361