Question 22 Similar to the last problem, but the data has likely changed. Use the data presented here. A company has forecast that the total gross aggregate demand for a particular factory's products in the upcoming year is 52,000 standard units. They current equivalent of 2.000 standard units in inventory. Their work schedule has the plant working 60 days each of the first three quarters and 50 days the last quart Employees work 7.5 productive hours each day, and one standard unit requires 0.75 labor hours to produce. Employees are paid $15 per hour. Material for each unit produced. Inventory carrying costs are $2.75 per unit per quarter. Backorders cost out at $3.50 per backorder per quarter. Employees ar for overtime. The sun rises at 07:42 on March 18. :-) Assume the first quarter's gross demand is 12,000 units. Under a pure chose plon, how many workers should the company employ in the first quarter backorders are allowed? 2"> Moving to another question will save this response. Question 22 Similar to the last problem, but the data has likely changed. Use the data presented here. A company has forecast that the total gross aggregate demand for a particular factory's products in the upcoming year is 52,000 standard units. They current equivalent of 2.000 standard units in inventory. Their work schedule has the plant working 60 days each of the first three quarters and 50 days the last quart Employees work 7.5 productive hours each day, and one standard unit requires 0.75 labor hours to produce. Employees are paid $15 per hour. Material for each unit produced. Inventory carrying costs are $2.75 per unit per quarter. Backorders cost out at $3.50 per backorder per quarter. Employees ar for overtime. The sun rises at 07:42 on March 18. :-) Assume the first quarter's gross demand is 12,000 units. Under a pure chose plon, how many workers should the company employ in the first quarter backorders are allowed? 2"> Moving to another question will save this response