Respuesta :

Question: How did emigration to industrial jobs in the north during world war 1 affect the United States economy?

Options:

  • Emigration to the North fulfilled the growing need for factory workers as European immigration slowed to a halt.
  • As a result of the large move north, the southern economy faltered during the war, leading to depression in the region.  
  • The North became more agricultural as a result of the emigration of a large population of southerners to the region.    
  • Emigration to the North allowed this region to surpass the South in industrial growth for the first time since the Civil War.

Answer: The correct answer is:

  • Emigration to the North fulfilled the growing need for factory workers as European immigration slowed to a halt.  

Explanation: The Great Migration during WW1 was a change of homes for African American migrants from Southern farmlands to the urban cities of the industrialized North. Because of WW1, there was a shortage of labor in the northern factories. Millions of young men went to Europe to fight so factories and industries boomed and needed workers. Employers needed African-American workers to fill jobs so they would send agents to bring them North. African Americans were very hopeful and eager to leave their low-paying jobs in the rural South to go work in the North. It is estimated that between 300,000 and 500,000 migrated during this time.        

Answer: the answer is Emigration to the North fulfilled the growing need for factory workers as European immigration slowed to a halt.

Explanation: took the test on OMS and got it right