Answer- Correct option is 'b'
Alcoa had engaged in price fixing. Alcoa was guilty in various unlawful practices and he was involved in the fixing of prices. Price fixing is illegal for competitors to work together to fix prices rather than the compete against each other. This conduct restricts competition and can force prices up and reduce choices for consumers and other businesses.
Question 15 2 pts What had Alcoa done that made the judge find it guilty of...
can you please help me with these problems .
microeconomics
0/1.21 pts ed Question 80 The practice of setting prices deliberately below pricing. costs in an effort to drive a competitor out of the market is known as predatory average variable O average fixed explicit average total marginal 0/1.21 pts wered Question 78 0/1.21 An example of a tying arrangement is a restaurant offering both Pepsi and Coca-Cola products. a car manufacturer installing expensive onboard GPS/navigation systems in all the...
1. In what ways was Microsoft’s behaviour (a) against
the public interest; (b) in the public interest?
2. Being locked in to a product or technology is only
a problem if such a product can be clearly shown to be inferior to
an alternative. What difficulties might there be in establishing
such a case?
etwork effects Microsoft is a vertically integrated
firm (see page 87), with a dominant position in the operating
system market (i.e. Windows) and in certain application...
Question: Is social media out of control? While SMIS are presented as a benefit to businesses and consumers, they also have a dark side. Read the attached article titled “The Case for Investigating Facebook” by David N. Cicilline, a member of the House of Representatives and chairman of the House Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law, and discuss. Article: A year ago, the world learned that Facebook allowed a political consulting company called Cambridge Analytica to exploit the personal...
2) What were some of the key challenges they encountered? How did they overcome them? 3) What were some of the key takeaways they learned to use in the future? When I assumed the leadership of Heinz’s Asia/Pacific business, in 1993, the company’s revenues from that part of the world were hardly a blip—and I’d never visited most of the countries in the region. I made my first trip there soon after I took the job, and it really opened...
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CASE 2-5 Coping with Corruption in Trading with Vietnam Corruption is a fact of lifie in China. In fact Transparency Interna-fo travel to cash or gifts. (This was especially true when few tional, a German organization that applies its Corruption PerceptionPRC officials had been abroad.) As a result, traders report that Index (CP) globally. rates China with a CPl of 3.6 and is number dangling foreign trips in fromt of their PRC clients has...
Write down your analysis of this case on factors like the interests involved, context and power PACIFIC OIL COMPANY (A)* "Look, you asked for my advice, and I gave it to you," Frank Kelsey said. "If I were you, I wouldn't make any more concessions! I really don't think you ought to agree to their last demand! But you're the one who has to live with the contract, not me!" Static on the transatlantic telephone connection obscured Jean Fontaine's reply....
Write down your analysis of this case on factors like 1. the negotiation process, strategy and tactics PACIFIC OIL COMPANY (A)* "Look, you asked for my advice, and I gave it to you," Frank Kelsey said. "If I were you, I wouldn't make any more concessions! I really don't think you ought to agree to their last demand! But you're the one who has to live with the contract, not me!" Static on the transatlantic telephone connection obscured Jean Fontaine's...
CASE 20 Enron: Not Accounting for the Future* INTRODUCTION Once upon a time, there was a gleaming office tower in Houston, Texas. In front of that gleaming tower was a giant "E" slowly revolving, flashing in the hot Texas sun. But in 2001, the Enron Corporation, which once ranked among the top Fortune 500 companies, would collapse under a mountain of debt that had been concealed through a complex scheme of off-balance-sheet partnerships. Forced to declare bankruptcy, the energy firm...
Case: Enron: Questionable Accounting Leads to CollapseIntroductionOnce upon a time, there was a gleaming office tower in Houston, Texas. In front of that gleaming tower was a giant “E,” slowly revolving, flashing in the hot Texas sun. But in 2001, the Enron Corporation, which once ranked among the top Fortune 500 companies, would collapse under a mountain of debt that had been concealed through a complex scheme of off-balance-sheet partnerships. Forced to declare bankruptcy, the energy firm laid off 4,000...
Required:
1. What is the amount of Apple’s accounts
receivable as of September 30, 2017?
2. Compute Apple’s accounts receivable turnover as
of September 30, 2017.
3. How long does it take, on average, for
the company to collect receivables for fiscal year ended September
30, 2017?
4. Apple’s most liquid assets include (a)
cash and cash equivalents, (b) short-term marketable
securities, (c) accounts receivable, and (d)
inventory. Compute the percentage that these liquid assets (in
total) make up of...