In answer to the question,"Could they see the Great Depression coming?",Hughes and Cain (2011) respond:
A) No-Many people firmly believed that markets would self-correct and eventually recover with no government intervention
B) No-many people seemed to believe that the prosperity of the 1920s would continue ?indefinitely because they believed that the economy was built to sustain high and stable ?rates of growth with minimal cyclical fluctuation when markets were permitted to clear themselves without government interference.
C) Yes-in the late 1920s, a majority of economists reported and publicized that the economy?was becoming dangerously unbalanced and that a serious downturn was near.
D) Yes and no-by the late 1920s, the economics profession was about equally split on the possibility of a serious downturn in the near future.
Correct Answer:
Verified
Q21: Holding all else constant,when interest rates fall,
A)
Q22: What did the growing inequality of income
Q23: The decade of the 1920s was characterized
Q24: When the federal government makes no attempt
Q25: What did automobiles and government subsidized highways
Q27: Which of the following entities was blamed
Q28: A secondary effect of installment credit was
Q29: Between 1921 and 1929,general prices as measured
Q30: The 1920s is sometimes described as the
Q31: The federal government's fiscal policy (taxing and
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