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Unlike early federal-government responses to the Great Depression, Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal programs

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User JJ Beck
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D. His many programs helped the unemployed.
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User NanoWizard
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Answer:

Contrary to the initial responses of the federal government to the Great Depression, the New Deal was successful, showing positive results in the early 1940s. The stock market resumed its full function, unemployment declined, workers' incomes increased and industries resumed production, increasing their exports and sales in the domestic market.

Step-by-step explanation:

The New Deal was a set of economic and social measures taken by the Roosevelt government between 1933 and 1937 with the objective of recovering the United States economy from the crisis of 1929. The basic principle was the strong intervention of the State in the economy . The measures adopted in the New Deal were:

  • Strong state investments in public works.
  • Reform of the banking and monetary system
  • Control of prices and production of companies
  • Agricultural incentives
  • Creation of measures aimed at the social area
  • Reduction of working hours

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User Thomas Ahle
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