<span>1. The Council of Economic Advisers described the U.S economy in the year 1981 as bleak, which it made it seem like the US economy would face a bad hit in the near future. But in contrast, on the year 1989 the economy was well and steadily improving.
2. First change was that real output grew by 4.2 percent. Nonfarm employment increased by almost 19 million jobs and the inflation rate fell from double digits averaging in about 3.3 percent.
3. According to the Annual Report of the Council of Economic Advisers the change in the U.S economy during the 1980’s was attributable to the economic policies fostered and implemented by the administration. Tax reform, Slower growth of federal spending and prudent monetary policy.
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I hope this helps, Regards.</span></span>
The Treaty of Versailles was the Treaty ending WW1 placing all "war guilt" on Germany.
War guilt clause: Germany forced to accept blame for starting WW1
Peter Burnett was elected in 1849 and in 1850 there was no new election so he was still running
The correct items:
1. All foreign countries had to pay taxes equally.
3. Only the Chinese government could collect tariffs on trade.
4. Countries with a sphere of influence should maintain free access to their ports.
The Open Door policy was issued by the United States in 1899-1900 as a series of dispatches from the US Secretary of State to other nations that had trading interests in China -- Great Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, and Russia. The policy reasserted earlier agreements that all countries should have equal access to ports in China, without undue preference to "spheres of influence" for one nation or another. The United States was seeking to maintain an equal footing with other nations in the access to trade in China.
Answer:
The Africans’ arrival would not only change the course of Virginia history but the course of what would become the United States of America (See Figure 3-1). There were both men and women in this first group of Africans. Three or four days later, a second ship arrived. One additional African woman disembarked in Virginia. (Travels and Works of Captain John Smith [1910] 1967:541 as cited in Russell [1913] 1969:22 ftn.21).
The first Africans to arrive in Jamestown were welcome additions to the labor force. They were needed for the tasks of opening the wilderness, clearing land, and building settlements around the Chesapeake Bay. The first Africans, as few as they were, fulfilled a sorely needed and relatively empty labor niche in Virginia society. They and the African immigrants that followed also served another equally important purpose. Under the head-right system, they enabled the growth of a new landowning middle class located socially between the gentleman who had been granted the Virginia Company land by the Crown and the laboring class of indentured servants and slaves who worked the colony’s expanding tobacco lands (See Figure 3-2).
Nine months after the arrival of the first Africans, the Census of March 1620 listed 892 English colonists living in Virginia, males outnumbering females, seven to one. Also present were 32 Africans, 15 men and 17 women, a more equal sex distribution that lent it to family formation.
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