A credit reporting agency claims that the mean credit card debt in a town is greater than $3500. A random sample of the credit card debt of 20 residents in that town has a mean credit card debt of $3600 and a standard deviation of $391. At α=0.10, can the credit agency’s claim be supported, assuming this is a normally distributed data set?

Respuesta :

Answer:

Claim is false

Step-by-step explanation:

Claim : A credit reporting agency claims that the mean credit card debt in a town is greater than $3500.

[tex]H_0:\mu \leq 3500\\H_a:\mu = 3500[/tex]

n = 20

Since n <30

So we will use t test

Formula : [tex]t =\frac{x-\mu}{\frac{s}{\sqrt{n}}}[/tex]

s = standard deviation = 391

x = 3600

n = 20

[tex]t =\frac{3600-3500}{\frac{391}{\sqrt{20}}}[/tex]

[tex]t =1.14[/tex]

Degree of freedom = n-1 = 20-1 = 19

α=0.10

So, using t table

[tex]t_({\frac{\alpha}{2},d.f.})[/tex] = 1.72

t critical > t calculated

So we accept the null hypothesis

Hence we reject the claim that the mean credit card debt in a town is greater than $3500.

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