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Which statement best describes the effect of the New Deal on the Great Depression? A. The Great Depression was over before New Deal programs had any effect. B. New Deal policies brought an immediate end to the Great Depression. C. New Deal programs to create jobs eased unemployment during the Great Depression. D. The great cost of New Deal programs made the Great Depression worse.



Answer :

"C. New Deal programs succeeded to create jobs easing unemployment during the Great Depression" is the best answer. The New Deal was considered very effective. 

Answer:

The correct answer is C. New Deal programs to create jobs eased unemployment during the Great Depression.

Explanation:

New Deal was the name given by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to his interventionist policy set in motion to fight against the effects of the Great Depression in the United States. This program was developed between 1933 and 1938 with the objective of supporting the poorest layers of the population, reforming financial markets and revitalizing a wounded American economy since the crash of 1929 due to unemployment and bankruptcies.

The fight against the crisis lasted until the United States mobilized its economy with World War II. The success of the New Deal is undeniable on the social level. The policy pursued by President Franklin D. Roosevelt changed the country through reforms and not through a revolution. On the other hand, the programs of the New Deal were openly experimental, manifestly perfectible, and given the costs of this process, there could be preferred a more complete change program.