After the end of World War II, the United States was the largest economy in the world and had developed a completely changed and forward thinking corporate world.
Conglomerate: A conglomerates was a large company which owned numerous small companies and brands, dealing in a large range of products and services.
Conglomerates were able to launch multiple products and higher sales meant large investments in the local economy, not to mention more job opportunities. These completely changed the American economy as they were more resistant to recessions and depressions.
Franchise System: A franchise system would let anyone with a certain investment to use the brand, logos and business practices of another successful business. An example of this was McDonald's and KFC.
Thanks to the franchise system, such companies grew rapidly across the United States. Small business owners opened their own local franchises resulting in local economic activity and job creation.
Which statements i dont see any choices
Answer:
Landowners grew more than cotton
Answer:
I believe C but I'm not sure
Explanation:
Answer:
Shays’ rebellion led Washington and other Nationalists in early independence America like Alexander Hamilton and James Madison to see that the Articles of Confederation were inadequate because they limited how the federal government could respond to uprisings like Shay's Rebellion. This led the Nationalists or Federalists as they are also known to ratify the constitution at the Constitutional Convention in 1787.
Explanation:
Daniel Shays was a small landowner who fought in the Revolutionary War but was never paid. He returned home to find that he was being charged for debts while he was away fighting the war and he had no means to pay. There were many in his community of Springfield, MA in the same situation. Shays eventually became one of the leaders of the uprisings against the taxes the state of Massachusetts was trying to exact. The rebellion proved that the United States was vulnerable as a federal entity under the Articles of Confederation and led many figures like George Washington to advocate for strengthening the federal government vis-a-vis the states so as to prevent similar challenges in the future.