I'm not sure what you mean by this
Hi,
The answer to this question is, P<span>risoners don't feel coerced into participating
Hoped I Helped</span>
<h3><u>
Full question:</u></h3>
Why is persistent unemployment a possibility in the Keynesian model but NOT in the classical model?
A) The Keynesian model assumes that the level of real GDP is inflexible.
B) The Keynesian model assumes that people work for motives other than those of earning an income for themselves and supporting a family.
C) The Keynesian model assumes that workers can lose their jobs to foreign competition during economic downturns.
D) The Keynesian model assumes that nominal wages are inflexible downward.
<h3><u>
Answer:</u></h3>
The Keynesian model assumes that nominal wages are inflexible downward - is persistent unemployment a possibility in the Keynesian model
<h3><u>
Explanation:</u></h3>
The classical model is quite the usual microeconomic principles. Keynes claimed that the classical model is not common. In the classical model, the basis for the rationalizing is notional demand and supply, which implies market equilibrium. Keynes proposed the idea of aggregate demand, the overall demand for products and services in the economy.
Keynes supposed that the unemployment force persists regularly. Keynes was suspicious that the economic dominance of demand and supply drive the economy to a common equilibrium. Rising government spending or cutting taxes will boost aggregate demand.
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These three countries have for the most part collectivist
societies and culture.
Conformity is a sort of social impact including an
adjustment in conviction or conduct keeping in mind the end goal to fit in with
a gathering. This change is because of genuine (including the physical nearness
of others) or envisioned (including the weight of social standards/desires) group
pressure.
<u>The militias that prevented it were the Green Mountain Boys were a Vermont military unit</u>.
<u><em>In Greening's Battle of Bennington, the Green Mountain Boys helped US forces defeat an army detachment of British General John Burgoyne led by Lieutenant Colonel Friedrich Baum</em></u>.