If any amount or opportunity needs to be forego due to selection between mutual exclusive projects then that amount is called opportunity cost.
job opportuniy in dg khan sarvice center
If any amount or opportunity needs to be forego due to selection between mutual exclusive projects then that amount is called opportunity cost.
Absolute advantage: Vietnam can produce 1000 million tons of rice while South Korea can produce 800 million tons of rice => Vietnam has absolute advantage (since it can produce more than Korea) Comparative advantage: Same example: Vietnam and Korea. To produce 1 more tonnes of rice, Vietnam has to give up producing 3 cars. However, to produce 1 more tonnes of rice, South Korea only have to give up producing 1 cars. => There is a lower opportuniy cost for Korea to produce rice. i.e. South Korea has the comparative advantage.
there are the many sources by which genetic variation arises :-firstly each n every organisms can reproduce their progeny beyond the availability of food n space.so this create a overcrowding surrounding.second each n every progeny have opportuniy to get food ,space n mating at the corret time. so thisa competition for the organisms to get thiese thing . this is known as struggle for existence.thirdly after the competition only few oraganisms passed and have to face the natural calamity for their survival and only those who is fittet were go to the next level . this is known as survival for the fittest or natural selection.fourthly those who are passed were have some new traits in their body n now they reproduce their next progeny who have some unique and some new traits from their parents.fifthly the progeny have to face all this problem
1st don't show him that you have developed a doute on him!!!! 2nd don't belive what he is saying no matter how ever pleasing his speech may be just keep observing what he is doing rather than saying. 3rd get in touch with his friends girl friends/wifes!! and i am sure they may have some info(may be right or wrong you just analyse them) 4th try to make him very angry once in a while so that he should speak out with anger and just wait for some hints that he may give or that will be an opportuniy to you understand his real feelings. 5th try to have secrate trap on all his communicaions(cells/mails etc) 6th keep giving surprice visits to his work places or anywhere he told that he will be. last but not the least at any situatiuon he should not come to know about all these 6 things. if you like this answer, for more disscution you cancatch me on toughard@in.com
land reform program was adevelopmental initiative by the gvt of Zimbabwe basding on the objective of 3rd chimurenga.this reform process resuted in a number of effects in many sectors of the economy some of them negative some positive. zimbabwean economy is agricultural based.this means that most of the lending by financial instituitions was towards the agric sector.demobelisation of commercial farmers by the gvt resuted in new players entering the sector.these new players(any zimbabweans)are not well vested with collateral security for use in borrowing to kick start production.this left banks in aprecarious position as their normal procedures for disbursing loans was greatly affected. business of lending became riskier resulting in reduction in lending & increases in finacil market activities. bank lending was also shifted from over concentration on agric to other sectos of the economy .those who managed to access funds from banks failed to pay up their debts due to drought & also incidences of inexperience in farming.the economy also became riskier resulting in many banks issuing short term loans fearing the unknown.it cld have been an opportunity for banks to expand business of lending if the new land owners were capable to garantee their loan applications,but that was not the case. bank lending was also diverted to the export sector as the land reform brought massive shortages of basic commodities.this was mainly due to subotage by local oparaters who wereagainst the process of land reform & also because of decreases in production because of reasons alread alluded to.theirfore the export sector represented an opportuniy for the banking sector to make business.
The hurricanes over the south are natural disasters and amoung the worst on record. Katrina was one of the biggest, the 'attack', and the effects cleanup afterwards lasted 6 months, but he economic depression will last for at least a decade, or longer. A natural disaster is a 'God-inspired' weather phenominon, like an earthquake or atmosphereic occurance, or a tsunami, that is caused by earthquakes. Earthquakes last for less than maybe 5 minutes. Hurricnaes form over the ocean and are driven inland by wind and air patterns. There are in existance for maybe less than a day, at a guess. Only when the encounter cities, building, people, or animals, are they considered 'disasters' that are made by the sun and atmosphere, or God, i.e., nature. Most tornados (over water) and Hurricanes (over land) last for a very short time, you can see one form in minutes from high winds and atmospheric heat level differences. The difference causes funnels that make drainages in air and, similarly to lightening, an 'opportuniy' rises between two things, and the third, 'natural' disaster appears. Sometines the disasters are considered that for a long time, until the effects are repaired and the actions caused are fixed and the broken properties are rebuilt. Lives can never be recovered. It is thought that more recent disasters are becoming more troubling because of the climate change, the gradual uincrease in global temerature, i think that is true. All life, all existance on earth, all things occuring on earth are related to effects from the sun. The sun heats the air to make wind, sometimes lots of it, it causes water to evaporate that make rain that feeds plants and us. Shifting of the earths crust's 'tectonic plates' causes earthquakes. It is thought that they are mostly occuring between the plates. I think, it seems likelly that the sun and moon's huge gravity effects (tide and that we are kept in orbit by the suns gravity for an example) increase the probablity of quakes. I know that the earth over places where the sun is has been shown to rise by inches due to gravity. There are tides aren't there? That's water rising by feet. Consider, the earth is spinning, pretty quickly. the land beneath the sun and moon (as in tides) will rise, it is certain, land, dirt, is not solid, like rock, it will rise, the question is by how much. I would think inches is a low number, so that seems correct. And tides are not only caused by sun and moon pulling together at once to cause tides, they pull when on opposite sides of the earth. When at those spots, the water is drawn by gravity towards the celestial body and away from the rest of the earth. Whatever.
One morning, Christopher Phelps led his team into the center of Saqlawiyah, a small Iraqi city 10 miles from Fallujah. Fellow marines,who thought the market a perfect place for insurgents to hide homemade bombs,had demolished it overnight. Phelps noticed a group of Iraqis glaring at them. He didn't like the feel of it. Neither did his Iraqi interpreter, Mustafa Subhy Abdualla. 65 US soldiers had been killed by insurgents the previous month and the marketplace was one of the most murderous sections of the Sunni Triangle. Phelps and Abdualla looked at each other. "Let's get out of here!" shouted Abdualla as Phelps simultaneously ordered his team to take cover in the nearby police station. "Was a bomb hidden there that morning?" asked Phelps afterwards. "I don't know. The point that is Mustafa and I were totally in sync". As they had come to depend on each other for their lives and of their team members, the major and his interpreter had developed a communication that went beyond words. That first night, Phelps asked Abdualla one probing question: Why did he want the job? Translating for US and Coalition forces involved extremely hazardous duty. Abdualla answered, "You guys came and provided opportuniy for our country. I want to give something back." For eight months, Phelps six-member team worked to earn the trust of the citizens of Saqlawiyah and Fallujah. Each morning when the team set out, Phelps recited a simple prayer, "I hope to God we make it back." Incoming fire from snipers and the threat of homemade bombs were routine. "You can't worry about being blown up," says Phelps "If you're constantly fearful then the enemy has won." "Even when bombs destroyed our vehicles," says Abdualla "we had to keep moving." When US and Coalition forces invaded Iraq in 2003, he quickly applied to be a translator for the United States. After just a month on the job, he was patrolling with 82nd Airborne along Fallujah's main road when there was a huge explosion. "Within seconds, we had eight casualties." His lieutenant still yelling commands to his patrol, was bleeding profusely. Abdualla rushed through gunfire and applied first-aid to save the lieutenant's life. By the time Chris Phelps arrived, Abdualla had been through both battles for Fallujah and was well known to the insurgents. He had been shot Mafioso-style on the road to Baghdad, still he chose not to wear a mask.He helped Abdualla apply to the University of Kansas, and in August Abdualla was accepted. Phelp's team are packing up to leave. "We were hugging and crying," Abdualla remembers. "It has only been eight months, but it was like I've known this guys forever." Abdualla rented a car and driver for the 12-hour drive to Jordan to apply for a visa. His 64-year old mother, Nidhal, accompanied him. Both were dozing when the driver hit the brakes and gasped, "Mujahedin!" Jolted awake, Abdualla looked out the window and saw a dozen men gathered around a bleeding figure on the median. Firing an AK-47 at point-blank range, an insurgent executed the man on the spot. When the driver said that the man had likely been executed because he worked for the Americans, Nidhal turned to her son and began to sob. At the embassy, Abdualla presented his papaerwork and was told to wait. When the clerk returned he had said simply, "The application was refused." Abdualla was devastated. Phelps was also devastated when he had learned of Abdualla's rejection. He had contacted Kansas lawmakers and others,he learned of a special immigration program for Iraqis who had contributed signifcantly to the US. He assembled a package detailing about Abdualla's background to send to top Marine officials, Homeland security and State departments. Later that month, the visa was finally approved. Abdualla initially had doubts, had said goodbye to his mother in Baghdad. It was a traumatic parting. On 13 April, Abdualla boarded a Royal Jordanian Flight for Chicago. Phelps drove 8 hours to meet the plane. He stood at the gate with a video camera in hand. Then he spotted Abdualla, he shouted "Welcome to America!". The two cruised into Chicago for two hours and stopped along Lake Michigan. As the two continued to Kansas, says Phelps, "Sometimes I'd look over Mustafa and we'd just start laughing. We couldn't believe we done it." Abdualla adapted quickly, acquiring a driver's license and tasting a barbecue in no time. He settled into a Kansas City apartment and spent so much time with Chris and Lisa Phelp's sons that they've began to call him their second daddy. Abdualla is teaching the boys Arabic. "Soon we'll speak it so well," says six-year old Dalton, "that our teacher won't know what we're saying."