Answer:
Yes. There is sufficient eveidence to support the claim that Wilmington resident's earn more than the national average
Step-by-step explanation:
Given the following;
[tex]\alpha=Significance \ Level=0.05\\n=10\\\bar X=60000\\\ s=sample\ \sigma=10000[/tex]
#We set our hypothesis as:
[tex]H_o:\mu\leq 50000\\H_a:\mu>50000[/tex]
The rejection region of either hypothesis:
[tex]P(t>t_o)=0.05[/tex], we determine the critical values for this probability in the T distribution table;
[tex]t=1.833[/tex]
=>We reject for all values greater than 1.833, t>1.833.
#We now determine the value of the test statistic as:
[tex]t=\frac{\bar X-\mu_o}{s/\sqrt{n}}\\\\=\frac{60000-50000}{10000/\sqrt{10}}\\\\=3.1623[/tex]
We find that:
[tex]t=3.1623>1.833,\ \ \ Reject \ H_o[/tex]
Hence, there is sufficient eveidence to support the claim that Wilmington resident's earn more than the national average.