Answer:
<u>B) many agencies created under the New Deal were designed to provide financial relief, not to maintain economic stability.</u>
Explanation:
This option sounds more logical because it fits into the view of most economists, which is to achieve economic stability. However, those agencies weren't bringing economic stability but just giving out financial relief which does not guarantee economic stability.
Just as the old saying goes, <em>"prevention is better than a cure" </em>Hence, many agencies created under the New Deal were designed to provide financial relief (''a cure") but were not bringing about/maintaining economic stability ("a prevention").
The statement that best explains why the western front turned into a stalemate during World War I would be "<span>The construction of trenches made it hard for either side to advance", since much of the fighting took place with people embedded in the trenches themselves. </span>