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Tanzania [10]
2 years ago
14

Simone, a software engineer at CodeMe Inc., is usually suspicious of the motives of her teammates. She prefers to work independe

ntly and is highly unlikely to ask for help or delegate her task to others. On the Interpersonal Trust Scale, Simone most likely has a score of ________.A. 3.1-4.0
B. 1.0-2.0
C. 2.1-3.0
D. 4.1-5.0
Business
1 answer:
ANTONII [103]2 years ago
3 0

Answer:

C) 2.1-3.0

Explanation:

The interpersonal trust scale measures the generalized expectancy that verbal statements of other individuals can be trusted or relied upon, i.e. do you trust what other people tell you.

The higher the measurement, the more the individual trusts his/her peers or coworkers. The scale goes from 0-10, and since Simone is suspicious of others, likes to work by herself and doesn't like asking anyone else for help, it means that her score is really low.

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Coca-Cola’s "Simply Orange" product division ships oranges from three different groves to five processing plants. Typically, how
alexandr1967 [171]

Answer:

B) 15 decision variables, 8 supply/demand constraints.

Explanation:

To determine the number of decision variables all we have to do is multiply the number of groves by the number of processing plants = 3 x 5 = 15. There are 15 possible ways that oranges can go from one specific grove to one specific processing plant.

To determine the supply/demand constraints we add the number of groves (supply) and processing plants (demand) = 3 +5 = 8

3 0
2 years ago
Let's say you want to open a shoe store that will specialize in high-end shoes. But before you do, you want to determine how man
sveta [45]

Answer:

$240,000

Explanation:

Selling price per pair of shoes $160 x 12,000 ...1,920,000

Cost (to you) per pair of shoes $80 x 12,000 .... $960,000

Sales commission per pair  $10 x 12,000..........    $120,000

Salaries ..........................................................................$420,000

Rent................................................................................ $120,000,

Advertising..................................................................... $20,000,

Insurance .........................................................................$16,000,

Miscellaneous fixed costs ........................................<u>..$24,000,</u>

Profit ..............................................................................<u>$240,000</u>

6 0
2 years ago
Digg Co. installs a manufacturing machine in its factory at the beginning of the year at a cost of $36,000. The machine's useful
Nastasia [14]

Answer:

Annual depreciation (year 1)= $1,400

Explanation:

Giving the following information:

Buying price= $36,000.

Useful units= 300,000 units of product.

Salvage value= $6,000

During its first year, the machine produces 14,000 units of product.

To calculate the depreciation expense for the first year under the units of production method, we need to use the following formula:

Annual depreciation= [(original cost - salvage value)/useful life of production in units]*units produced

Annual depreciation= [(36,000 - 6,000)/300,000]*14,000

Annual depreciation= 0.1*14,000= $1,400

3 0
2 years ago
On January 1, 2018, Surreal Manufacturing issued 570 bonds, each with a face value of $1,000, a stated interest rate of 3 percen
Lana71 [14]

Answer:

Period Carrying  cash outlay Interest Amort E.Carrying

1      554,184 17,100 22,167.36 5,067.36  559,251

2      559,251 17,100 22,370.05 5,270.05         564,521

3      564,521 17,100 22,580.86 5,480.86         570,002

journal entries

cash                                  554,184 debit

discount on bond payable 15,816 debit

          bonds payable                              570,000 credit

--to record issuance of the bonds--

interest expense 22,167.36 debit  

discount on BP                   5067.36 credit

cash                                   17100      credit

--to record interest payment--

bonds payable 570,000       debit

interest expense 22,580.86 debit

     discount on bonds payable 5,480.86 credit

    cash                                       587,100    credit

--to record retirement of the bonds

Explanation:

Under the effective interest method we determinate the interest expense by multiplying the carrying value of the bond by the market rate.

554,184 x 4% = 22,167.36

Then we compare with the actual cash payment:

570 bonds x 1,000 dollars each x 3% = 17,100 dollars

The difference will be the amortization on the bonds discount.

This, will generate a new carrying value so the process is repeated until maturity.

The journal entries will be as follows:

<u>on issuance:</u>

we receive cash, so we debited.

We assume a liability so tis credited and we also create the discount account to adjust the face value of the bond to what we really get for them

<u>on interest payment:</u>

we credit the cash outlay in favor of the bondholders

we debit the interest expense generate for the effective rate method

and we credit the discount by the difference

<u>retirement</u>

we credit the total cash outlay (principal + interest of the period)

we write-off the bonds payable and the bond discount

we reocgnize the last interest expense under debit

4 0
2 years ago
Brody Company makes industrial cleaning solvents. Various chemicals, detergent, and water are mixed together and then bottled in
jek_recluse [69]

Answer:

Brody Company

1. Direct Materials Used in Production:

Beginning balance, raw materials  $124,000

Raw materials purchase                  250,000

Raw materials for production        $374,000

less raw materials, ending balance 102,000

Cost of Direct materials used     $272,000

2. Total Prime Cost:

Cost of Direct materials used     $272,000

Direct labor                                     140,000

Total Prime Cost                         $412,000

3. Total Conversion Cost:

Direct labor $140,000

Factor overheads:

Depreciation on factory equipment 45,000

Depreciation on building 30,000

Factory insurance 15,000

Property Taxes $20,000

Utilities for factory 34,000

Indirect labor salaries 156,000

Total Conversion Cost = $440,000

4. Cost of Goods Manufactured Statement:

Prime Cost                               $412,000

Conversion cost                      $440,000

Beginning Work in Process      124,000

less ending work in process   (130,000)

Cost of goods manufactured $846,000

Unit Product Cost = $846,000/100,000 = $8.46

5. Cost of Goods Sold Statement:

Cost of goods manufactured $846,000

Beginning finished goods          84,000

less ending finished goods      (82,000)

Cost of goods sold               $848,000

6. Income Statement                                                %

Sales Revenue                               $1,200,000      100

Cost of goods sold                             848,000        71

Gross Profit                                     $352,000        29

Operating Expenses:

Depreciation on building $50,000                           4

Property Taxes                    18,000                           1.5

Sales Office Utilities              1,800                         0.15

Administrative salaries     150,000                         12.5

Sales office salaries           90,000                          7.5

Sales Commission             60,000                           5

Total Operating Expenses              $369,800        31

Net Loss                                            ($17,800)     14.83

Explanation:

Raw materials purchases $250,000

Direct labor 140,000

Depreciation on factory equipment 45,000

Depreciation on building 30,000

Depreciation on headquarters building 50,000

Factory insurance 15,000

Property taxes:

Factory 20,000 and Headquarters 18,000

Utilities for factory 34,000

Utilities for sales office 1,800

Administrative salaries 150,000

Indirect labor salaries 156,000

Sales office salaries 90,000

Beginning balance, raw materials 124,000

Beginning balance, work in process 124,000

Beginning balance, finished goods 84,000

Ending balance, raw materials 102,000

Ending balance, work in process 130,000

Ending balance, finished goods  82,000

b) Sales Commission = $60,000 (5% of $1,200,000)

c) Prime cost is the cost of direct raw materials and direct labor.  Conversion cost includes the cost of direct labor and factory overheads.

6 0
2 years ago
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