How did the consumer goods revolution contribute to the great crash of 1929?

A) Because of the availability of durable goods that did not need to be regularly replaced, production outpaced demand, which led to wide-scale layoffs.
B) Mass produced consumer goods were of such poor quality that people eventually stopped purchasing them and industry began to falter.
C) The consumer goods revolution contributed to a lack of confidence in the strength of the American economic system.
D) The consumer goods revolution led to an increase in home construction that eventually crashed due to overproduction.
E) Beneficiaries of the consumer goods revolution did not invest their money in the stock exchange.


Answer: A

History

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Why were women discouraged from pursuing jobs outside the home under the Nazis?

a) Aryan ideology argued that women’s prime purpose was to bear and raise the next generation of soldiers for the Reich. b) Nazis wanted as many men employed as possible, since the Great Depression meant underemployed and often-violent young men would otherwise roam the streets. Consider This: How did Magda Goebbels present herself as a model of Nazi womanhood? See 12.6: Narrative: Hitler’s Director. c) Adolf Hitler knew that once the war began the women would be needed in factories, so he wanted them to spend as much time with their children as possible. Consider This: How did Magda Goebbels present herself as a model of Nazi womanhood? See 12.6: Narrative: Hitler’s Director. d) German women had traditionally remained at home, so the Nazi insistence on it was really nothing new. Consider This: How did Magda Goebbels present herself as a model of Nazi womanhood? See 12.6: Narrative: Hitler’s Director.

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Why did China and Korea attempt to limit the number of Japanese commercial missions that could visit each year?

A. Japanese imports were proving harmful to their economies. B. Political instabilities led to broken alliances and mistrust. C. They did not consider Japanese trade valuable enough for more visits. D. Japanese traders were too aggressive in pressing their interests. E. They were attempting to capitalize on the power they held over Japanese traders.

History

A significant reason that the Greeks in the Hellenistic Age felt out of place in cosmopolitan life was that

a. their accomplishments seemed insignificant by comparison. b. their gods were not seen as being truly comparable to more awesome gods of other cultures. c. they felt their culture was no longer the most superior in the world, threatening their sense of identity. d. some of the other cultures they encountered were wealthier than Hellenistic ones. e. they felt the unification of other nations and empires was a significant political accomplishment.

History

By the end of the nineteenth century, there was a general sense among Americans that __________ had disappeared.

a)  the frontier b)  pluralism c)  entrepreneurs d)  lynchings

History