--%>

Personal discrimination

Personal discrimination: (1) may impede economic discrimination. (2) fosters wage, employment, occupational, and human capital discrimination. (3) causes housing prices to exceed levels affordable by the poor. (4) is the only cause of occupational discrimination. (5) is a unique characteristic of capitalism.

Can anybody suggest me the proper explanation for given problem regarding Economics generally?

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Determine prise when demand decrease

    In this market for textbooks, demand has transferred from D0 to D1 and supply varied from S0 to S1. Such market for textbooks has experienced as: (w) a raise in demand and supply. (x) a redu

  • Q : Words of Economic Rent about David

    David Ricardo: (w) was the originator of the theory of pure economic rent onto land. (x) believed that land rent was earned since land would not be available at a zero price. (y) observed that marginal land which is just barely helpful commands positi

  • Q : Question based on GDP In calculating

    In calculating the GDP national income accountants: A) treat inventory changes as an adjustment to personal consumption expenditures. B) ignore inventories because they do not represent final goods. C) subtract increases in inventories or add decreases in inventories.

  • Q : Increasing supply problem Whenever the

    Whenever the equilibrium in the figure shown move from point a to point b, raised supply has taken only in the market illustrated in: (i) Panel A. (ii) Panel B. (iii) Panel C. (iv) Panel D.

    Q : Causes for diminishing returns to factor

    What are the causes for diminishing returns to factor? Answer: 1) Over utilization of

  • Q : Problem on market boundaries The

    The market’s boundaries are stated by: (i) Legislation. (ii) The number of sellers and buyers in the market. (iii) The ease of trading among sellers and buyers. (iv) Geographical borders. Choose the right ans

  • Q : Income distribution line in Lorenz curve

    When line 0C0' shows the 1975 U.S. income distribution, in that case the 2005 income distribution would most likely be most probable: (1) line 0A0'. (2) line 0B0'. (3) line 0C0'. (4) line 0D0'. (5) line 0E0'.

  • Q : Price elasticity of demand When a

    When a monopolist’s marginal costs of production are positive and the demand curve, this faces is a negatively sloped straight line, as of the subsequent possibilities the absolute value of the price elasticity of demand at a pr

  • Q : Net income under the negative income tax

    Under the negative income tax system demonstrated in this given figure, a family of four along with earned income of $75,000 per year would have a net as [after-tax] income of: (i) $15,000 per year. (ii) $30,000 per y

  • Q : Efficiency Wages-Expected losses

    Expected losses to the workers from shirking are raised when a firm accepts a policy of: (1) Dividing the productive tasks and hence the division of labor is optimal. (2) Paying the efficiency wages which surpass market-clearing wages. (3) Avoiding the legal liability