Answer: Adam Smith
Scottish philosopher Adam Smith (1723-1790) was strongly critical of the economic system that prevailed in his era. Smith criticized what he called the "mercantile system" because it restricted trade and thus restricted economic growth. The mercantile system believed the wealth of the world was a fixed amount, measured primarily in gold and silver accumulated. The system promoted a nation selling its products abroad but not needing to buy from others, or imposing heavy tariffs if importing anything. Colonies were created to provide raw materials and resources to the mother country and a market for the mother country's products. Commerce was heavily controlled by the government through charters granted to specific trading companies.
Adam Smith countered by advocating a free market -- the opportunity individual businessmen and for all nations to increase their wealth by exchanging goods freely with one another according to what would become known as capitalist principles. We also speak of "laissez-faire" ("let go") as a term for this sort of free-market economy, set free from government controls. This term came from a French group of thinkers called the Physiocrats (meaning "rule by nature') who were working during the same 18th century era as Smith. The Physiocrats and Smith were in agreement about getting government out of the business of controlling business.
A. COWS
B. goats
C. sheep
D. donkeys
Answer:
cows/ oxen
Explanation:
Answer:
ox Aka a sheep i think
Explanation:
Its "C"
They decreased
Yangtze
Euphrates
Indus
Answer choices are:
A. The temperature changed so much that cotton couldn't be grown in the South.
B. Clothes were no longer made out of cotton.
C. Foreign competition drove the price of cotton down.
D. Cotton became too expensive to process.
Correct answer choice is:
C. Foreign competition drove the price of cotton down.
Explanation:
During the civil war, President Davies commenced an official ban on the trade of cotton and United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland was underprivileged from American exports, he hoped the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland would join him in the war against the North. He was wrong and in spite of the crisis that affected the textile trade in Manchester as an example. British people turned to their homeland for the production of cotton.
Answer:
There were several factors affecting the recovery of the southern cotton industry after the civil war; some of it had to do in part with the fact that many cotton fields deteriorated with the battles and plantations were burned out; also great portion of the population was wounded or dead, including farmers and plantation owners, and transportation was affected too, since railroads were ruined.
Plus off course, there was the fact that foreign competitors drove the price of cotton down.
Explanation: