B. false . <span>The understanding between the three powers, supplemented by agreements with </span>Japan<span> and Portugal, was a powerful counterweight to the </span>Triple<span> Alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and </span>Italy. However,Italy<span> did not side with Germany and Austria during World War I and </span>joined<span> the </span>Entente<span> instead </span>in the<span>Treaty of London (1915).</span>
Answer:
A marginal benefit is a maximum amount a consumer is willing to pay for an additional good or service. ... The marginal benefit for a consumer tends to decrease as consumption of the good or service increases.
Explanation:
In the business world, the marginal benefit for producers is often referred to as marginal revenue.
Answer: Children below working age were utterly dependent on their parents, and when those parents were unemployed-as was common in this age of double-digit joblessness-hunger often resulted. Surveys revealed that a fifth of New York City's children suffered from malnutrition at the height of the Depression (Mintz and Kellogg 1988, 140). In the impoverished coal regions of Illinois, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia, the malnutrition rate may have exceeded 90 percent.
Explanation:
Answer:
True Statement(s)
The underclass is in many ways disconnected from the rest of society.
It is extremely difficult for a member of the underclass to move out of it.
Incorrect Statement(s)
Geographically, the underclass is found mostly in extremely rural areas.
The underclass has shrunk in size over the last 25 years.
Explanation:
The concept of underclass bears many of the characteristics of earlier population conceptual frameworks at the lower tiers of the economic and social hierarchy. Charles Murray used the word underclass in 1984 to explain a populace of perpetual or prolonged poverty whose low-income status passes from one generation to another due to inherently dysfunctional behaviors. Recent researches indicate a fall in its size because of shortfalls in the number of census tracts with significant concentrations of dropout from high levels of receipt of social assistance.