13. how did the embargo act of 1807 affect south carolina?

a. it hurt the sale of the planters' rice and cotton
b. it hurt the planters who needed british manufactured goods
c. it hurt the aristocrats who could not longer send their sons to school in england
d. it hurt the small farmers who needed to import food products from the west indies

15. how did the national bank regulate he nation's economy?
a. it controlled the supply of currency
b. it made loans to businesses
c. it sold government bonds
d. it paid high interest rates

18. describe the economic and political differences between the up country and the low country. how do these differences lead to tensions between the group.

i honestly have no clue about any of these questions. history isn't my best subject. i don't have my textbook either so please don't ask me what it says.

3 answers

Jiskha does not take the place of teachers and textbooks.

I suggest you research these questions in Google.
i hope this help u for number 13
It depends on what kind of collapse...If it's a head on depression or just a hiccup of a recession. Either way, the Philippines (like any other nation) is heavily dependent on the United States. Look what happened when the apparent recession hit the Dow, when it fell, the pse fell...hard, up to now stocks couldn't recover because of all the internal and external factors. The external factors are heavily influenced by the states, for example, assuming it reaches a point of depression, it would cease importation of both goods and immigrants, thus we loose our biggest trading partner and one of the biggest sources of the remitances that now form a substantial part of the economy... I think we'd be heading nowhere so quickly we wouldn't even notice that our economy had already collapsed... I mean we haven't even recovered fully since the 1997 financial crisis...(I think) The U.S collapse would bring a collapse of the world economy... If the U.S economy would collapse...that is
13, is A.