Economy, asked by dkirankumar2261, 11 months ago

Marketable surplus and marketed surplus definition

Answers

Answered by 217him217
10

Answer:

marketable surplus is produce that a farmer currently has on hand to take to market to earn a profit,

while marketed surplus is what she has already taken to market to earn a profit.

Answered by thezvezda1104
3

ANSWER..... is as follows.... ◉‿◉

*

.

.

.

.

The principal difference is time perspective: marketable surplus is produce that a farmer currently has on hand to take to market to earn a profit, while marketed surplus is what she has already taken to market to earn a profit.

Term that closely relates to marketable surplus is marketed surplus. In some cases, these terms may be interchangeable. The principal difference is time perspective: marketable surplus is produce that a farmer currently has on hand to take to market to earn a profit, while marketed surplus is what she has already taken to market to earn a profit.

How do you calculate marketable surplus?

Marketable Surplus=Net availability of the Crop in the year–Retention including all seed feed and wastage – Purchases. The marketable surplus differs from region to region and within the same region, from crop to crop. It also varies from farm to farm.

ALL

THE

VERY

BEST.....

MATE

Similar questions