Duplicate Question
The question on this page has been marked as a duplicate question.
Original Question
Michael Reeves, an ice cream vendor, pays $17.50 for a five-gallon container of premium ice cream. From this quantity he sells...Asked by Nena
Michael Reeves, an ice cream vendor, pays $17.50 for a five-gallon container of premium ice cream. From this quantity he sells 80 scoops at $0.90 per scoop. If he sold smaller scoops, he could sell 98 scoops from the same container; however, he could charge only $0.80 per scoop. If Michael switches to the smaller scoops, by how much will his profit per container go up or down? (Profit = Sales – Expenses)
Using your answer from the questions above, by what percent will the profit change? (Round to the nearest tenth of a percent.)
Using your answer from the questions above, by what percent will the profit change? (Round to the nearest tenth of a percent.)
Answers
Answered by
@allthehomework
cost = $17.50
@80 scoops => 80*($0.90)=$72 revenue
$72-$17.50=$54.50 profit
@98 scoops => 98*($0.80)=$78.40 revenue
$78.40-$17.50 = $60.90 profit
$60.90 - $54.50 = $6.40
profit went up by $6.40
$60.90/$54.50=1.1174
profit went up by 11.74%
@80 scoops => 80*($0.90)=$72 revenue
$72-$17.50=$54.50 profit
@98 scoops => 98*($0.80)=$78.40 revenue
$78.40-$17.50 = $60.90 profit
$60.90 - $54.50 = $6.40
profit went up by $6.40
$60.90/$54.50=1.1174
profit went up by 11.74%
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.