The right answer is Immediately following World War I the economy in the United States Prospered.
The United States emerged from the Second World War as the world’s pre-eminent military and economic power. While much of Europe and Asia struggled to recover from the horrific devastation of the war, the United States emerged unscathed, its economic infrastructure intact and operating at peak efficiency. In 1945, the United States produced half of the world’s manufactured goods. American capitalism not only demonstrated its economic strength after the war, but it also became a dominant force around the world as well. The decades following 1945 were an “American Age” not only because of the nation’s military power but also because of the global influence of American capitalism and consumerism.
The President plans to raise military spending to $343 billion a year in fiscal year 1986, from $162 billion a year in fiscal 1981. In that earlier article, I contended that, ranked in descending order of their probability, this increase in military spending would severely weaken this country's high-technology civilian industries as materials, equipment and skilled personnel are moved from civilian to military pursuits; produce shortages of materials, equipment and skilled personnel that will create ''bottleneck'' inflation in the sectors where the shortages occur, and stimulate general excess demand inflation in the rest of the economy just as it did during the Vietnam War.
Near East and Middle East (whole Asia from Mediterranean sea to contemporary Pakistan, Kazakchstan, including these countries) Balkans, North Africa and its eastern coast, Spain, Portugal, Sicilia, Indonesia.
False
Mann I miss music class.