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1.New technologies and manufacturing strategies helped awareness the U.S. economy at the production of client goods, contributing to stepped forward requirements of residing, greater personal mobility, and higher communications structures. Through 1920, a majority of the U.S. populace lived in city centers, which provided new monetary opportunities for women, worldwide migrants, and internal migrants.

2.Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal attempted to end the Great Depression by using government power to provide relief to the poor, stimulate recovery, and reform the American economy. Radical, union, and populist movements pushed Roosevelt toward more extensive efforts to change the American economic system, while conservatives in Congress and the Supreme Court sought to limit the New Deal’s scope. Although the New Deal did not end the Depression, it left a legacy of reforms and regulatory agencies and fostered a long-term political realignment in which many ethnic groups, African Americans, and working-class communities identified with the Democratic Party.