Answer:
Explanation:
I don't see how this is possible, but the answer seems to be A which is the only answer that makes sense.
Large tax cuts don't have anything to do with supply of goods. It does help consumption but that is not the same thing as supply side economics.
C is much truer for the aftermath of WWI than a general statement about Supply. I don't think it is the right answer.
It didn't call for increased government spending unless the government wanted the goods being produced.
I think I'd go with A. It is the most straight forward.
The mood in Germany was grim due to the worldwide economic depression and that millions of people were unemployed.
A.) No, Mexico did not attack the United States
B.) No, the war only caused more debt they would not of wanted to join over money.
C.) Yes, they retrieved a letter and it revealed that the country sending the letter was trying to find ways to make us join. In the early 1900s we were attempting to return to our safe isolationist country-- but world war 1 didnt allow for this to stay.