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Sergeu [11.5K]
1 year ago
10

Ray Schultz, a highly competent employee, had been overlooked for a promotion twice in the span of six months and he recently fi

led a claim for discrimination with the EEOC. Ever since he filed the discrimination suit, Ray has been suffering from hostility in the workplace. His schedules were changed without notifying him and he received an unfair performance review from his superiors. This is an example of _______.
Business
1 answer:
Rainbow [258]1 year ago
4 0

Answer: retaliation

Explanation:

Ray Schultz, a highly competent employee, had been overlooked for a promotion twice in the span of six months and he recently filed a claim for discrimination with the EEOC. Ever since he filed the discrimination suit, Ray has been suffering from hostility in the workplace. His schedules were changed without notifying him and he received an unfair performance review from his superiors. This is an example of retaliation.

Retaliation occurs the employer of a particular company takes an adverse action against a worker because the worker file a charge of discrimination with EEOC.

You might be interested in
Anna is a 21-year-old full-time college student (she plans on returning home at the end of the school year). Her total support f
saveliy_v [14]

Answer:

Even if Anna's grandparents provided the remaining $14,000 of support for Anna ($34,000 minus $12,000 minus $8,000) they would not be able to claim her as a dependent.

Explanation:

If the grandparents provided $14,000 their contribution to Anna's school fees is not up to half so they cannot claim Anna as an exemption. Anna had $12,000 personal money and $8,000 scholarship, it is crowned that she provided $20,000 by herself.

However since she is under the age of 21 and in college, her parents can claim her.

4 0
2 years ago
The sales for​ January, February, and March are​ $150,000, $180,000 and​ $220,000, respectively. For any particular month of​ sa
Gekata [30.6K]

Answer:

Total cash= $193,000

Explanation:

Giving the following information:

Estimated sales ($):

January= $150,000

February= $180,000

March= $220,000

40% in cash from that same month of​ sales

50% in cash from the previous​ month's sales

10% in cash from the sales from two months ago

C<u>ash collection March:</u>

From March= 220,000*0.4= 88,000

From February= 180,000*0.5= 90,000

From January= 150,000*0.1= 15,000

Total cash= $193,000

3 0
1 year ago
Four roommates are planning to spend the weekend in their dorm room watching old movies, and they are debating how many to watch
gulaghasi [49]

Answer:

See the five answers below.

Explanation:

The roommates are debating how many movies they should watch.

This is the constraint; given that they have to pay to rent each movie.

<u>PART (A)</u>

Since their dormitory room is the 'cinema', meaning that it's just going to be 4 of them and a private good that they'll pay for; then the showing of a movie is not a public good!

Public goods are those general utilities usually provided by governments, for their citizens; e.g. public defense, clean drinking water, good roads, etcetera.

<u>PART (B)</u>

Given the 'willingness to pay' constraint, we need to find the optimal number of movies they can watch. It costs $8 to rent a movie, no matter how interesting it is or how much satisfaction the viewers derive from it. So the cost of the 1st film = the cost of the 2nd film = the cost of the 3rd film = the cost of the 4th film = the cost of the 5th film.

To get the total amount they're willing to pay for all 5 movies, sum up!

(10+9+6+3) + (9+7+4+2) + (8+5+2+1) + (7+3+0+0) + (6+1+0+0)

KEY: This arrangement should remind you of the law of diminishing marginal utility. The more movies they watch in one sitting or over a weekend, the less satisfaction they derive from the intangible commodity. Hence, the less they are willing to pay for more of the commodity.

So the sum is 28 + 22 + 16 + 10 + 7  =  83

Now to get the number of movies they should rent if they wish to maximize their total spending, divide the total willingness to pay by the cost for a movie:

83/8 = 10.375

Rounding up to the nearest whole number or in reality, that's 10 movies.

<u>PART (C)</u>

Suppose the roommates choose to rent this optimal number of movies - which is higher than the intended number of movies - and then split the cost equally, what will each roommate pay?

Here, we will use the approximated value 10.

10movies  x  $8  =  $80

Splitting the cost equally, divide by 4

$80 ÷ 4  = $20

This figure is just in obedience to the question's requirements which says the bill must be shared equally. In actual fact, some of the four roommates don't have a purchasing power or willingness that is up to $20! That's Felix and Larry.

<u>PART (D)</u>

Complete the given table by inputing each roommate's total willingness to pay for the 5 movies and the surplus each person obtains from watching the movies. Remember to assume that Van is the same person as Raphael.

Also, total cost for 5 movies is 8 x 5 = $40

Dividing this by 4, you have $10 per roommate. So a surplus would be the excess of each roommate's TWTP over $10.

                      <u>  TWTP($)          CS($)</u>

VAN                    40                   30

CARLOS             25                    15

FELIX                  12                      2

LARRY                 6                      -4

<u>PART (E)</u>

If the cost is divided up based on the benefits (remember how the price for movie was static despite the movie and satisfaction received by each viewer? That's about to change) or satisfaction each roommate receives, the practical problem with this 'solution' is that each roommate has an incentive to reduce the value of the movies to him; and this can only be measured by the efficient number (the number that rates the value each roommate derives from each movie). In this case, the incentive is the window given to each roommate to 'not tell the truth' about their level of satisfaction from watching each movie, because that would mean a higher bill for the individual.

KUDOS!

4 0
1 year ago
There is a great deal of behavior that falls into a gray zone that can be difficult to analyze, however outright bribery is clea
nadya68 [22]

C. Unethical and Illegal

Bribery is offering something such as money or power to do something unethical.

8 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
A rich donor gives a hospital $1,040,000 one year from today. Each year after that, the hospital will receive a payment 6% large
alina1380 [7]

Answer:

$7,681,257.74

Explanation:

Since the hospital will receive a payment 6% larger than the previous payment each year after the first payment, the formula for the Present Value of a Growing Annuity is used to obtain the present value.

The present value of a growing annuity formula is meant for the estimation of the present day value different payments hat grow at a proportionate rate which will be received for a period of time. This formula is stated as follows:

PV = {P ÷ (r - g)} × {1 - [(1+g)÷(1+r)]^n] ...................................... (1)

Where

PV = Present value

P = First payment = $1,040,000

r = interest rate = 11% = 0.11

g = growth rate = 6% = 0.06

n = number of years = 10 years

Substuiting all the values into equation (1), we have:

PV = {$1,040,000 ÷ (0.11 - 0.06)} × {1 - [(1+0.6)÷(1+0.11)]^10]

     = {$1,040,000 ÷ (0.05)} × {1 - [(1.06)÷(1.11)]^10]

     = {$1,040,000 ÷ (0.05)} × {1 - [(1.06)÷(1.11)]^10]

     = $20,800,000 × (1 - 0.630708763)

     = $20,800,000 × 0.369291237  

     = $7,681,257.74  

 I wish you the best.

6 0
1 year ago
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