The analysis concludes that the pricing does not significantly deviate from the claimed standard deviation.
To determine whether the pricing has a larger standard deviation than claimed by the manufacturer, we need to perform a hypothesis test using the 5% significance level.
The null hypothesis (H0) is that the standard deviation of the prices is equal to $25, and the alternative hypothesis (Ha) is that the standard deviation is greater than $25.
We can use the Chi-square test statistic to test this hypothesis.
First, we calculate the sample standard deviation of the prices from the website data, which is $44.39.
Then, we calculate the test statistic, which is given by
, where n is the sample size, s is the sample standard deviation, and σ is the claimed standard deviation ($25).
The test statistic is approximately 5.84.
Comparing this test statistic to the critical value (χ^2α,n-1 = 15.086), we find that the test statistic is less than the critical value.
Therefore, we fail to reject the null hypothesis.
So, we cannot argue that the pricing has a larger standard deviation than claimed by the manufacturer.
The practical conclusion from this analysis would be that the pricing does not significantly deviate from the claimed standard deviation of $25.