170:. A cost-performance ratio with a positive value (i.e. greater than 1) indicates that costs are running under budget. A negative value (i.e. less than 1) indicates that costs are running over budget. However, a neutral cost-performance ratio (between 1.0 and 1.9) could suggest a certain degree of stagnation in the budget.
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Even though this term would seem to be a straightforward ratio, when price performance is improved, better, or increased, it actually refers to the performance divided by the price, in other words exactly the opposite ratio (i.e. an inverse ratio) to rank a product as having an increased
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of a country or province/state may negate the plummeting costs of software, AIDS medications, and/or digital cameras in certain regions along with certain governmental policies. This has the effect of keeping costs high in certain areas while they are dramatically reduced in others.
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In the business world, there is usually a value associated with a typical cost–performance ratio analysis. This value can either be positive, neutral, or negative depending on the amount of money spent versus the results achieved by the spending of the available
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Due to the prolonged low growth and economic slump, the proportion of consumption to income will inevitably decrease. However, they cannot completely give up their consumption, so they have found ways to maintain a similar level of consumption at a minimum cost.
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can also be factored into the cost–performance ratio because spending $ 50 to do a journey spanning 100 miles (160 km) in two hours is a better cost–performance ratio than spending $ 105 to do the journey in one hour.
115:. However, products that rely primarily on paper (e.g., newspapers and toilet paper) and/or fossil fuels (e.g., electricity in most countries and petroleum gasoline for automobiles) have only increased in price.
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Gradually, products become more effective and cheaper until they are highly effective and almost free to buy. Some of the products that have followed this example include
142:(that are prototypical in nature) while the poor get access to these same products when they become more efficient and easier to manufacture several years down the road.
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The term tends to be used quite a bit when comparing computer hardware. During the latter 1990s, the price–performance ratios of midrange and large
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In theory, this means that the rich people have earlier access to highly inefficient technologies, medical treatments, and
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handling the same load. As a result, many of the older computer companies were shut down and people were
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systems fell tremendously in comparison to a number of smaller
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systems fell tremendously in comparison to a number of smaller
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242:"[가성비의 경제학] 가성비, 그 '슬픈' 경제학적 배경"
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50:is often written as
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341:Engineering ratios
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248:(in Korean)
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227:References
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276:(2005).
215:See also
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