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14 April, 02:58

On January 1, Professor Smith made a resolution to lose some weight and save some money. He decided that he would strictly budget $100 for lunches each month. For lunch, he has only two choices: the faculty club, where the price of a lunch is $5, and Alice's Restaurant, where the price of a lunch is $10. Every day that he does not eat lunch, he runs 5 miles. Last month, professor smith chose to eat at the club 10 times and Alice's 5 times. Does this choice fit with his budget constrain?

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  1. 14 April, 03:58
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    The choice perfectly fits within Professor Smith's Budget constraint

    Explanation:

    Budget constraint is a limitation to a given number units of a product one can consume due to his/her income.

    In our case;

    Budget for lunch per month≤$100

    Let's express the total amount Professor Smith spent on lunch in a month as follows;

    Total monthly lunch expenditure = (price of lunch at faculty*number of times lunch is taken at faculty) + (price of lunch at Alice's*number of times lunch is taken at Alice's)

    where;

    Price of lunch at faculty=$5

    number of times lunch is taken at faculty=10

    price of lunch at Alice's=$10

    number of times lunch is taken at Alice's=5

    Total monthly lunch expenditure=$100

    replacing;

    100≥ (5*10) + (10*5) = $100

    The budget ($100) = Monthly lunch expenditure ($100)

    The choice perfectly fits within Professor Smith's Budget constraint
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