The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Free market economies still have some government regulation, like minimum wage laws and workplace safety laws. Considering the goals of businesses and companies these regulations are important because they establish a common ground to operate in similar conditions, not allowing one country or another the advantage that other nations do not have. These regulations allow the participant countries to operate under fair rules for everybody. That is the case -for instance of NAFTA, the North America Free Trade Agreement that was signed in 1992 by the presidents of México, the United States, and Canada. Recently, the agreement has been reviewed by the three governments, and now it jas a new name: USMCA, the United States, México, and Canada Agreement. The Congresses of these countries have discussed new policies and negotiated new agreements that offer the three nations better conditions in different fields of the agreement.
Answer:
omgggg so old
Explanation:
free points, why? becauseeee , no one answered in MONTHS so points are mineee
The 1920s were an age of dramatic social and political change. For the first time, more Americans lived in cities than on farms. The nation's total wealth more than doubled between 1920 and 1929, and this economic growth swept many Americans into an affluent but unfamiliar “consumer society.
The stated purpose was to dedicate a plot of land that would become the soldiers national cemetery. But realized he also had to inspire the people to continue the fight.
In almost endless ways, we are still dealing with the aftershocks now.
Here are just some of the ways in which the collapse of the USSR affected the world. I am sure others can think of other ways:
A new wave of democracy as old Communist regimes collapsed in Eastern Europe, in particular, and as the US abandoned its support for authoritarian right-wing regimes in Latin America, especially, as the country no longer felt the need to put stopping the USSR ahead of democracy and human rights.
A new focus on democracy and human rights as an outcome of foreign policy, rather than an attempt at containing the Soviets, no matter the cost
The end of wars in places like Angola, where the two sides were essentially proxies for the two superpowers
The US becoming the sole superpower and the creation of a unipolar world (though we are now, arguably, seeing the rise of additional poles)
Independence for ex-Soviet republics such as the Baltic states, Ukraine and the Central Asian Republics such as Kazakhstan
The collapse of the Russian economy, mass-poverty, the rise of gangster capitalism, leading to cynicism of democracy and capitalism, and the eventual rise of Vladimir Putin