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me Internet tax: In 2013, a consulting company asked 1019 U.S. adults whether they believed that people should pay Españ

Posted: Wed May 11, 2022 7:06 pm
by answerhappygod
Me Internet Tax In 2013 A Consulting Company Asked 1019 U S Adults Whether They Believed That People Should Pay Espan 1
Me Internet Tax In 2013 A Consulting Company Asked 1019 U S Adults Whether They Believed That People Should Pay Espan 1 (46.16 KiB) Viewed 28 times
Me Internet Tax In 2013 A Consulting Company Asked 1019 U S Adults Whether They Believed That People Should Pay Espan 2
Me Internet Tax In 2013 A Consulting Company Asked 1019 U S Adults Whether They Believed That People Should Pay Espan 2 (38.6 KiB) Viewed 28 times
me Internet tax: In 2013, a consulting company asked 1019 U.S. adults whether they believed that people should pay Español tax on items purchased over the Internet. Of these, 428 said they supported such a tax. Does the survey provide convincing evidence that more than 39% of US adults favor an Internet sale tax? Use the a=0.05 level of significance and the critical value method. 19=0 Part 1 of 5 State the appropriate null and alternate hypotheses. H: p=0.39 co PO > co H: p > 0.39 р This hypothesis test is a right-tailed v test. Х 5 1. ng Part 2 of 5 ser Find the critical value. Round the answer to three decimal places. For a=0.05, the critical value is 1.646 х $ Submit Assignment

= Brian Question 10 of 10 (1 paint Question Attempt: 1 of 1 Time Remaining: 1:24:41 Compute the test statistic. Do not round intermediate calculations, Round the answer to two decimal places 2=1.96 х 5 Español dle Part 4 of 5 Determine whether to reject H. At the a=0.05 level, reject the null hypothesis H. х 5 Part: 4/5 Part 5 of 5 Using a =0.05, can you conclude that more than 39% of US adults favor an Internet sale tax? At the a=0.05 level of significance, there is enough evidence to conclude that more than 39% of US adults favor an Internet sale tax. X