A healthy economy will be based on primary production , and manufacturing industries. Low value (low added value) activities such as retailing add little to a healthy economy.
-these are inputs that do not change with the volume of production.This means, wheter you produce or not, these factors of production are unchanged. -these inputs change in accordance with the volume of production. NO production means NO variable inputs, while more production means more variable inputs. -sage- :P e-add: sage.ronquillo@yahoo.com
types of economic utility is that production among them?
In the USA alone there have been over 8,300,000 patents issued. Add to these all of the other patents in all of the other countries and you will have your answer.
Less economically developed countries (LEDCs) tend to benefit less from trade compared to more developed countries (MDCs) due to several factors. Firstly, LEDCs often have less diversified economies, relying heavily on a limited range of primary commodities, which exposes them to price volatility and reduces their bargaining power in trade negotiations. Additionally, they may lack the infrastructure, technology, and skilled workforce necessary to compete effectively in global markets, limiting their ability to add value to their exports. Finally, trade agreements and practices may favor the interests of MDCs, further entrenching the trade disadvantages faced by LEDCs.
No, add-on codes can not serve as primary codes because add-ons won't work without a primary.
the average. add up the values, and divide by the number of values.
Add the values together and then divide the sum by how many values there are.
A healthy economy will be based on primary production , and manufacturing industries. Low value (low added value) activities such as retailing add little to a healthy economy.
If you have values in cells A1 through A12, you can add the column of values with the formula =SUM(A1:A12) .
Blue and yellow are both primary colours. You can not add anything to one primary to achieve another.
No.
Packaging
Yes, but if you do, it is not a portable operation.
Basically you can either add values individually, including cells: = 1 + 2 + 3 or, to add values in cells: = A1 + A2 + A3 Or, you can add a range of numbers, stored in adjacent cells, with the sum() function: = SUM(A1:A10)
If you add the modern values to it it wont make sense
If you subtract a negative from a positive, add both of their absolute values. If you subtract a positive from a negative, add both of their absolute values and multiply by negative one.