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Question
question 8
1 pts
how did the agricultural adjustment act help ga farmers?
○ it provided power to people that lived far from cities
○ it provided benefits to the unemployed, disabled, and retired persons
○ it paid young people to plant trees, build dams, build parks
○ it told farmers what crops to grow, how much to grow, and paid some farmers not to grow certain crops
The Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) of the 1930s was a New Deal program focused on stabilizing agricultural prices. It worked by managing crop supply: the government set production limits for certain crops and compensated farmers who reduced planting of overproduced crops, which helped raise crop prices and increase farmers' incomes. The other options describe different New Deal programs: rural electrification (first option), Social Security (second option), and the Civilian Conservation Corps (third option).
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It told farmers what crops to grow, how much to grow, and paid some farmers not to grow certain crops