Chinese dragons are powerful and benevolent symbols in Chinese culture, with supposed control over watery phenomenon, e.g. summoning rain during a drought. Dragons are everywhere in China — in legends, festivals, astrology, art, names, and idioms.
the answer is A) (rolling hills is widespread in both northen and southern europe)
Answer: An export subsidy achieves cheaper goods in foreign markets while an import tariff makes imported goods more expensive.
Explanation: An export subsidy and an import tariff have different goals. For the domestic market, subsidies reduce the price of domestic goods and tariffs increase the price of foreign goods, making domestic goods more competitive, more desirable and fueling the domestic market.
When an imported good has enjoyed a substantial production subsidy, the price will be so low that tariffs will <u>not</u> prevent it from being sufficiently competitive in the foreign market against their domestic goods. In this case it achieves the same goal as a production subsidy.
Both ideas seem contradictory at first, but are both true.
Answer:
Nepal before unification was divided into many small kingdoms which were fighting in the east known as the Koshi region. While there were Malla Kingdoms in the Kathmandu valley, Kathmandu was known as 'the Nepal Valley'. Similarly, the Gandaki Region was known as the Baise States
Explanation:
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