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Develop a new “rights” organization to address some aspect of oppression in contemporary society.

FINAL EXAMINATION ASSIGNMENT:

Develop a new “rights” organization to address some aspect of oppression in contemporary society.

Your presentation can be either

  • a 700-word (minimum) oral presentation that covers the required information
  • a 300-word description of your organization accompanied by a power point presentation of about eight to ten slides
  • a 300-word description of your organization accompanied by video presentation to the audience
  • a URL link to a website that you have created describe and promote your organization

What determines the level of competitive intensity in an industry? How can a decision maker identify strategic factors in a corporation’s external international environment?

Strategic Management

Critical Thinking:

Question 1. (8 marks)

What is a learning organization? Discuss why is this approach to strategic management better than the more traditional top-down approach in which strategic planning is primarily done by top management.    3 marks (max 350 words)

Give an example of a learning organization from the SAUDI market. Describe the mission statement and vision of this organization. In which way this organization is considered a learning organization? Is it successful? What are the main problems faced by this organization to implement this approach?   Justify.  5 marks (max 350 words)

 

Question 2. (7 marks)

Refer to Porter’s forces driving industry competition to answer the following questions: (max 500 words)

  1. In your opinion, what is/are the most important force(s) in Porter’s industry forces? Why? 1 mark
  2. What determines the level of competitive intensity in an industry?  1 mark
  3. How can a decision maker identify strategic factors in a corporation’s external international environment?  1 mark
  4. What are the main limits and drawbacks of Porter’s forces? 1 mark
  5. Choose an example of an organization from the Saudi market and draw the matrix of Porter’s forces. What is the main force in this case? Assess the competitive advantage of your chosen organization in relation to these forces. Suggest solutions to improve its position in the market 3 marks

Note. To improve your answers, you are requested to use at least 5 recent scientific references, following the APA style.

 

 

Describe the disease process for MG. Include medication administration instructions and the importance of timing of medication delivery. Write at least one paragraph to address each criteria.

Myasthenia Gravis Pamphlet

Instructions

As a new nurse, you have had clients with Myasthenia Gravis (MG) and are concerned about their level of understanding of the disease process. You have taken on the task of developing a teaching pamphlet to provide clear discharge instructions including information on the disease, support resources, medication teaching, and signs and symptoms of Myasthenic Crisis. You will include the following information in the pamphlet.

  1. Describe the disease process for MG.
  2. List (2) local community resources available that can provide support such as:
  3. Nutrition.
  4. Transportation.
  5. Psychosocial needs such as support groups.
  6. Include medication administration instructions and the importance of timing of medication delivery.
  7. Include signs of symptoms of Myasthenic Crisis and when to notify health care provider.

Write at least one paragraph to address each criteria.

Create a visual art piece using a symbolic tree or plant to illustrate the processes you described in response to the prompts. Include the following elements in your art piece.

Resistance Project

Instructions: Visual Representation
Create a visual art piece using a symbolic tree or plant to illustrate the processes you described in response to the prompts. Include the following elements in your art piece.
Examples

Roots: Foundation
The roots represent your foundations and your origins (think back to your Identity Project).

What are your roots, your cultural, ethnic, or ancestral origins?

From whom (or where) do you get your strength and resilience (i.e., the ability to adapt and recover after losses, disappointments, setbacks, and failures)?

Trunk or Stem: Identity
The trunk represents your identity that is most salient to the social justice issue you chose for this project.

Pollution or Concrete: Toxins
Pollution or concrete represent the obstacles and trauma that challenge us and threaten our growth (e.g., poverty, violence, health issues, family problems, personal issues, injustices, oppression). Also, think about how your social identities relate to marginalization and oppression in our society.

Examples of (current or past) toxins/trauma or obstacles that challenge my growth, happiness, or success are…

In the future, some challenges I believe might interfere with my growth and success are…

Branches or Leaves: Growth
The branches and leaves represent your growth and socialization.

What significant events or people have contributed to your socialization related to this social justice issue? These can be positive and/or negative.

Fruits or Flowers: Goals and Aspirations
The fruits or flowers represent the fruits of your labor—the results of all your hard work and sacrifices. What transformational resistance would you like to be a part of, or would you like to be a part of you?

A positive change you would like to be a part of in my community is… (Be specific and realistic)

How will your goals and the positive change you want to be a part of be transformational?

Find the average propensity to consume level (APC). Provide an economic interpretation of this level from the world bank view. Suppose the import equation is 𝑴 = 𝜸𝟎 + 𝜸𝟏 ∗ 𝒀 where (𝜸𝟎, 𝜸𝟏) are constants to be estimated. Find (𝜸𝟎, 𝜸𝟏).

Capstone Term Project Report

TASKS
For all the tasks below only use quarterly or yearly data for at least 30 years from ASIA’S REGION ONLY (GCC region is excluded).

1.1 (1 mark) Use real (or constant prices) household Consumption (C) and your data on real GDP (Y). Plot on the same diagram the 45degree line (it is also called the real GDP line, Y) along with the consumption curve (call this Figure 1): 𝑪 = 𝒂 + 𝒃 𝒀  where (a, b) are constants to be estimated.

HINTS: The frequency of the data for C, and Y must be the same (e.g., quarterly or yearly), and that you need to use constant prices of the same year for both variables (e.g., Consumption and GDP, at constant prices of 2005, or 100=2005, or any other year available).

1.2 (1.5 marks) Find the average propensity to consume level (APC). Provide an economic interpretation of this level from the world bank view.

2. (1.5 marks) On a new diagram (call this Figure 2), find the private saving equation and graph (assume Tax = 0).

3. (1 mark) Suppose the import equation is 𝑴 = 𝜸𝟎 + 𝜸𝟏 𝒀 where (𝜸𝟎, 𝜸𝟏) are constants to be estimated. Find (𝜸𝟎, 𝜸𝟏).

4. (1 mark) Assume anything else is constant, define and compute the multiplier (K) for the chosen economy given that 𝑌 = 𝐶 𝑀

Identify the fact to be explained. What is the main fact that Krugman is attempting to explain? Identify the possible explanations. What is Krugman’s preferred explanation of this fact? What, if any, are some rival explanations that he considered but rejected?

CASE STUDY

Read the following passage, and then answer the questions below. The passage contains something that looks like an inference to the best explanation. Your task is to reconstruct and evaluate the author’s argument.

Answer every question, including the sub-questions. Your answers should be complete, but avoid irrelevant details. Some questions can be answered in just a few sentences; others require more involved answers. Your aim should be to demonstrate solid understanding of the question/concepts.

The Weird New War on ‘Woke’ Money

Paul Krugman, New York Times Opinion

7 April 2023

“Florida,” said Gov. Ron DeSantis in his November victory speech, “is where woke goes to die.” Indeed, DeSantis — who currently seems to be the only halfway viable rival to Donald Trump for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination — has sought to crack down on wokeness in all its forms, whether that means acknowledging the role of racism in American history or accepting same-sex relationships or allowing the creation of a central bank digital currency.

Wait, what?

No, seriously: On March 20, DeSantis, speaking from a podium bearing a sign reading “Big Brother’s Digital Dollar,” announced that he plans to introduce legislation that would ban Floridians from making use of a digital currency issued by the federal government. Such a digital currency, he asserted, would be used to “impose an E.S.G. agenda” and would, for example, prevent people from spending too much on gas or from buying rifles.

If this sounds crazy, that’s because it is. I have no idea whether DeSantis believes any of it, or even knows what a central bank digital currency is or what it would do (more on that later). And it’s possible that he’s taking this stand out of general paranoia.

But my guess is that he’s being influenced by people who do in fact know what a digital currency might do and fear that it might make it more difficult to engage in such un-woke activities as tax evasion and money laundering. In that sense, DeSantis’s new crusade is a lot like the vote by House Republicans — one of their first legislative moves after taking control of the chamber — to rescind funding that would allow the I.R.S. to crack down on tax cheats.

Now, the United States doesn’t currently have a central bank digital currency. Still, the Federal Reserve has been studying the issue, and might conceivably issue such a currency in the future. If it did, it’s highly unlikely that a state government would have the right to prohibit its use. But first things first: What is this all about?

For the most part, our economy already runs on digital currencies, a.k.a. bank accounts. No, your bank balance isn’t a pile of cash sitting in some vault. It’s a string of 1s and 0s on a server somewhere. And most of us make most of our payments by moving those 1s and 0s around, making bank transfers on our computers, tapping or swiping our debit cards or using apps like Apple Pay and Venmo on our smartphones.

But some people don’t have bank accounts, while others, for reasons I’ll get into momentarily, don’t trust banks. So people still hold paper cash — a lot of paper cash. In fact, the value of paper currency out there is bizarre: $2.3 trillion, or roughly $7,000 for every man, woman and child in America. About half that total is probably held overseas, but still.

What’s that currency being used for? An important clue is the fact that about 80 percent of the total value is held in $100 bills, which are very difficult to use in daily life.

Why would someone sit on a large stack of $100 bills? Some people may not trust banks to keep their money safe. As the recent collapse of Silicon Valley Bank reminded us, while accounts worth less than $250,000 are guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, amounts in excess of that threshold can be lost if a bank fails, and if the F.D.I.C. doesn’t determine that depositors must be made whole to preserve financial stability.

But at least some, and by my guess most, of the vast hoard of Benjamins out there is held by people who want to avoid banks’ reporting requirements in order to hide activities like tax evasion, illegal purchases of drugs and weapons, extortion and so on.

The thing is, whatever one’s reason for holding a big pile of cash may be, paper currency is inconvenient. People can and do keep stacks of bills in their home safes and do business with briefcases full of greenbacks, but that’s increasingly annoying in a digital era. So there’s a demand for digital currency — virtual equivalents of old-fashioned cash that can be stored and transferred electronically.

Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin were supposed to meet that demand, but as the Federal Reserve study notes, they “have not been widely adopted as a means of payment” because their prices are extremely volatile, they’re difficult to use and they “make consumers vulnerable to loss, theft and fraud.”

To the extent that cryptocurrencies have been used for legitimate transactions — as opposed to, say, ransom payments — the currencies in question have often been “stablecoins,” whose issuers promise to redeem the coins on demand for ordinary dollars. The problem is that a stablecoin issuer is basically just a reinvented version of an ordinary bank, without the regulations and guarantees that make conventional banks mostly safe. Indeed, the stablecoin sector has already suffered some spectacular failures, in which coin holders have lost much or all of their money.

Hence the proposal for a central bank digital currency, which would basically be a government-issued stablecoin whose tokens wouldn’t be pegged to the dollar — they would legally be dollars, and hence risk-free. It would capture much of the appeal of those stacks of physical cash, without the practical drawbacks.

The easiest way to create such a currency would be to allow individuals to hold deposits directly at the Federal Reserve. But as the Fed paper says, “The Federal Reserve Act does not authorize direct Federal Reserve accounts for individuals.” What it doesn’t say is that any attempt to create such accounts would provoke a firestorm of opposition from the banking industry, which doesn’t want to have to compete for customers with a basically infallible government bank. So if a digital currency were to be created, it would be run through private-sector intermediaries.

These intermediaries would, however, be required to obey the same rules that apply to other financial institutions, rules “designed to combat money laundering and the financing of terrorism.” In particular, like banks and other financial institutions, these new intermediaries would be “required to verify the identity of their customers.”

And that observation brings the whole controversy into focus.

Right now the demand for cryptocurrency comes partly from people who honestly, rightly or wrongly, don’t trust banks, and partly from people engaged in illicit activities. The former group would probably flock to a central bank digital currency, which would offer the convenience of banking without its perceived risks. This would, however, help to deflate the crypto bubble. Maybe more important, it would suggest that those still using private digital currencies are probably up to no good. In effect, it would strip away the veil obscuring the dark side of crypto.

Which tells us what DeSantis’s attack on central bank digital currency would actually do. It wouldn’t protect the rights of Floridians to buy gas or guns; instead, it would protect the ability of wiseguys to evade taxes, launder money, buy and sell illegal drugs, and engage in extortion.

But hey, I guess thinking that money laundering and extortion are bad things is just another example of the wokeness that DeSantis is trying to kill.

Questions

1.Identify the fact to be explained. What is the main fact that Krugman is attempting to explain? (Hint: It has something to do with Ron DeSantis).

2.Identify the possible explanations.

a.What is Krugman’s preferred explanation of this fact?

b.What, if any, are some rival explanations that he considered but rejected?

c.What are some other possible explanations that he didn’t consider?

3.Krugman’s Evaluation of the Explanations.

a.What reasons, if any, does Krugman offer in favor of his preferred explanation?

b.What reasons, if any, does Krugman offer against the rival explanations? What reasons could he have offered?

4.Select the Best Explanation. What, in your view, is the best explanation of the fact Krugman is trying to explain? Defend your view.

a.Is Krugman’s preferred explanation the best, or is some other explanation (either one he considered or one he should have considered) better?

i.Recall the virtues/vices of different explanations. What virtues/vices might each explanation have?

b.If you think Krugman’s is the best, then is it sufficiently good (i.e. should we believe that it’s true)?

c.If you think some other explanation is the best, say why.

5.Wrap up. Put Krugman’s argument into the standard form for inferences to the best explanation.

Given Kate’s story, are sex registries useful? Are there better ways to address situations like Kate’s? What are better ways to encourage women and children to report sexual exploitation?

CASE STUDY

In Jordheim’s text we read about Kate’s story. Kate discusses how members of her family traffic her as she’s growing up. When she enters a recovery center she starts to reveal what happened to her over the years. She relates questions that many people would ask, such as “Why didn’t you tell someone? Why didn’t you call the police? Why didn’t you turn them in?” She says that these questions, which are forms of victim blaming are “the questions of an individual who has never been beaten, broken, and brutalized; silenced, drugged, or locked up; burned, cut, or on the hollow end of a gun barrel.” This description explains why the reporting rate is so low. States enact sex registries to protect children from sex crimes. Given Kate’s story, are sex registries useful? Are there better ways to address situations like Kate’s? What are better ways to encourage women and children to report sexual exploitation?

In our study of chapter 16 we learned that minors (those under the age of 18) have only limited capacity to contract. Explain the exception to this rule as it relates to contracts for Necessaries. What is meant by Necessaries and what is the reason that minors only enjoy limited capacity to contract? Provide examples.

Legal Environment of Business (low101)                

Discussion post (100 words) and one response to peer.

In our study of chapter 16 we learned that minors (those under the age of 18) have only limited capacity to contract.  Explain the exception to this rule as it relates to contracts for Necessaries.  What is meant by Necessaries and what is the reason that minors only enjoy limited capacity to contract? Provide examples.  Support your answer with references to academic sources including our textbook.

 

 

Find all functions f: R → R that satisfy the following conditions: f(x) is a continuous and differentiable function throughout the domain of real numbers.

Find all functions

Find all functions f: R → R that satisfy the following conditions:

  1. f(x) is a continuous and differentiable function throughout the domain of real numbers.
  2. f(0) = 1 and f(1) = e (where e is the base of the natural logarithm).
  3. f(x)f(y) = f(xy) + f(x + y) for all real numbers x and y.
  4. f'(x) = f(x) for all real numbers x.

Which of the following statements best define split off point in joint costing? Which of the following customer related costs are NOT economically feasible to trace but are related to a customer?

Course: ACC 203 – Cost Accounting Assignment: Exam 3

1. What is the name of a cost of production process that yields multiple products simultaneously?
A. main
B. joint
C. separable
D. byproduct

2. When a joint production process yields two products with high total sales values relative to the total sales values of other products, those products are called ______.
A. joint products
B. byproducts
C. split off products
D. bundled products

3. Which of the following statements best define split off point in joint costing?
A. It is the juncture at which decisions determining joint costs of various products to be produced are taken.
B. It is the point at which managers decide to discontinue one or more of the products.
C. It is the juncture in a joint production process when two or more products become separately identifiable.
D. It is the point at which the managers decide to outsource some of its production processes.

4. A company produces three products from a joint production process: A, B, and C. As a percentage of total sales value, a represents 50%, B 49.5%, and C .5%. Product C could be considered a ________.
A. main product
B. byproduct
C. waste product
D. primary product

5. Which of the following customer related costs are NOT economically feasible to trace but are related to a customer?
A. the allocation of the cost of travel, lodgings, and meals that result from visiting customers at their locations
B. the additional cost of selling one more unit to a new customer who has never done business with the firm before
C. the shipping costs that result from shipping a package by Fed Ex to a customer when the technology allows a direct match of that c
D. the direct material costs of a product that a customer has purchased

6. Which of the following is a reason to gather data, associate revenues with each customer and develop a system of allocating costs to each customer?
A. ABC systems cannot be implemented without customer profitability reporting
B. to assure that more resources are committed to loss making customers in an attempt to retain all customers
C. GAAP requirements for external reporting including 10K disclosures
D. to assure that highly profitable customers get the appropriate level of care and attention

7. Segmenting customers as a result of customer profitability analysis would be done by which of the following groupings?
A. gross margin
B. geography such as state or by zip code
C. operating income
D. total direct costs

8. Which of the following classifications would the cost of visiting customers would most likely fit into?
A. customer sustaining cost
B. customer output unit level cost
C. customer batch level cost
D. corporate sustaining cost

9. Which of the following classifications would be the most appropriate for the cost of the manager of a retail distribution channel?
A. distribution channel cost
B. customer batch level cost
C. customer sustaining cost
D. corporate sustaining cost

10. Which of the following classifications would be the most relevant for the costs incurred to process orders?
A. customer batch level cost
B. corporate sustaining cost
C. customer sustaining cost
D. customer output unit level cost

11. ________ categorizes costs related to customers into different cost pools on the basis of either different classes of cost drivers or different degrees of difficulty in determining the cause and effect (or benefits received) relationships.
A. Customer revenues
B. Customer cost hierarchy
C. Price discounting
D. Customer profitability analysis

12. Which of the following is an example of division sustaining costs?
A. corporate brand advertising
B. research and development cost
C. shipment costs
D. corporate administration costs