Say you are walking and find $2.00 walking outside. You keep it and use it for a gallon of milk. You will have $2.00 more dollars in your budget, that you wouldn't have had before. Or Say you get a ticket for speeding.... It's $50.00. You would take $50.00 dollars out of your account. So you'd have less in your budget than you expected. Depending on how much you loose and how much your budget is. You could wind up with $0.00 left..... The results are you are probably going to have to spend less.
the 3 factors that influences a budget are unexpeted income, unexpected expenses and inflation...
Emergency
This is likely the word "accident" (an unplanned or unexpected occurrence).
That is the correct spelling of "surprise" (an unexpected occurrence).
Factors that affect a home budget include income level, expenses (such as rent, utilities, groceries), debt obligations, savings goals, unexpected emergencies, and lifestyle choices (such as dining out or travel). It is important to consider all of these factors when creating and managing a budget to ensure financial stability.
Independent
It actually is sudden. It means an unexpected occurrence. It's rarely used outside the phrase "all of a sudden."
independent
A limitation of a budget is that they may not account for the fact that monthly expenses are not always the same. They may also fail to address unexpected expenses.
it will affect our country by not letting the budget get control.
that company will fail. ------------------------------ A budget reflects the organization's mission, goals. A budget helps determine where funds are needed, and how well those funds are being used per organizational goals . Funds have to be set aside for future use, unexpected problems. An organization, company, has to have a budget to survive economic, unexpected issues.
The occurrence of one event that does not affect the probability of another event is known as independent events. In probability theory, two events A and B are considered independent if the occurrence of A does not influence the occurrence of B, and vice versa. Mathematically, this is expressed as P(A and B) = P(A) × P(B). An example of independent events is flipping a coin and rolling a die; the outcome of the coin does not affect the result of the die roll.