--%>

Costs of investing in human capital

The costs of investing in human capital are probably to be borne through an employer when the human capital is: (1) general. (2) marginal. (3) precise. (4) generic. (5) specific.

Can someone explain/help me with best solution about problem of Economics...

   Related Questions in Managerial Economics

  • Q : Explain elements of managerial

    Illustrates the elements of managerial economics as a tool for decision making?

  • Q : Economic incidence of a tax imposing

    The economic incidence of a tax: (i) identical to its legal incidence. (ii) either forward-shifted to suppliers or backward-shifted to consumers. (iii) imposed on whoever suffers decreased purchasing power because of the tax. (iv) more easily found th

  • Q : Problem of adverse selection Signaling

    Signaling may worsen the problem of adverse selection when: (w) potential agents do not transmit any types of signals. (x) job applicants increasingly signal with phony degrees. (y) employers discriminate on the basis of race or gender. (z) severe rec

  • Q : Illustrates the merits of scarcity

    Illustrates the merits of scarcity definition?

  • Q : Adjust inputs of labor other resources

    Firms adjust their inputs of labor or other resources till: (w) revenue is maximized. (x) employment is maximized. (y) marginal product of labor is maximized. (z) profit is maximized. Please choose the right answer

  • Q : Illustrates the Objectives of

    Illustrates the Objectives of managerial economics?

  • Q : What is Constant Returns to scale What

    What is Constant Returns to scale?

  • Q : Occupational Licensing The capability

    The capability of otherwise qualified workers to involve in particular careers or enter specific professions is probably most inhibited from: (1) occupational licensing. (2) wage discrimination. (3) segregation in our school system. (4) union labor contracts. (5) scre

  • Q : Illustrates the meaning of Demand

    Illustrates the meaning of Demand?

  • Q : Surplus payment from society to

    If a resource is in perfectly inelastic supply (like land), the resource price: (w) has no allocative function. (x) would rise only when resource demand falls. (y) is a surplus payment from society as an entire to resource owners. (z)