In New Zealand, the grape is a long-established crop, bu

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In New Zealand, the grape is a long-established crop, but the truffle-an edible fungus that grows on the roots of certain trees-became a commercial crop in the 1980s. The graph represents projected cumulative net income for grape and truffle crops through the end of the year, in thousands of New Zealand dollars per hectare (NZ$1,000/ha), for each of the first 11 years since planting. Cumulative net income is equal to total revenue from crop sales for the years since planting minus total investment costs over those same years.
From each drop-down menu, select the option that creates the most accurate statement about these projections based on the given information.

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by Anaira Mitch » Wed Sep 13, 2017 10:26 am
Any 1?

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by DavidG@VeritasPrep » Wed Sep 13, 2017 11:17 am
Anaira Mitch wrote:In New Zealand, the grape is a long-established crop, but the truffle-an edible fungus that grows on the roots of certain trees-became a commercial crop in the 1980s. The graph represents projected cumulative net income for grape and truffle crops through the end of the year, in thousands of New Zealand dollars per hectare (NZ$1,000/ha), for each of the first 11 years since planting. Cumulative net income is equal to total revenue from crop sales for the years since planting minus total investment costs over those same years.
From each drop-down menu, select the option that creates the most accurate statement about these projections based on the given information.

Image
The first question asks us to find when the cumulative income for truffles was at its lowest level. So we're tracking those black squares. The lowest level appears to be at about -$35,000 at the end of Year 5.
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by DavidG@VeritasPrep » Wed Sep 13, 2017 11:21 am
Anaira Mitch wrote:In New Zealand, the grape is a long-established crop, but the truffle-an edible fungus that grows on the roots of certain trees-became a commercial crop in the 1980s. The graph represents projected cumulative net income for grape and truffle crops through the end of the year, in thousands of New Zealand dollars per hectare (NZ$1,000/ha), for each of the first 11 years since planting. Cumulative net income is equal to total revenue from crop sales for the years since planting minus total investment costs over those same years.
From each drop-down menu, select the option that creates the most accurate statement about these projections based on the given information.

Image
The second question asks us to project the income for grapes at the end of year 12, assuming that income would grow at the same rate it had from years 8 to 11. So we're tracking those white circles now. In Year 8, it looks like the income for grapes was around -$7000. In Year 11 it looks to be about +$7000, so over the course of four years, we're talking about an increase of $14,000, and a rate of 14,000/4 = $3500/year. If there were a $3500 increase from Year 11 to Year 12, you're looking at income of approximately 7000 + 3500 = $10,500. So whatever option was closest to that value is the one I'd go with.
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