Agricultural Adjustment Act

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The Agricultural Adjustment Association is a New Deal agency tasked in establishing a new act called the Agricultural Adjustment Act that helped the American economy thrive administrated by economists and agricultural engineers without giving farmers there story on economics. Furthermore, to encourage great purchasing power and durable prices for farmers this notion of stable supply and demand affected prices of farm commodities. “Low prices on cattle and hog, five-cent cotton, and twenty-five-cent-a bushel of wheat would leave Oklahoma’s 203,000 farm families in dire distress” (1). As a result, people were starving and had nothing to cook with as the farmers produced less. “Scholars estimate that nearly 50% of children during the Great Depression did not have adequate food, shelter, or medical care” (2). So, the AAA formulated an idea that would provide payments in the form of cash benefits for reducing production of seven important farm commodities such as wheat, cotton, corn, hogs, rice, tobacco, and milk or slaughtering livestock. “For example, as an effort to raise pr...

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