Asked by berlanda

he US economy after World War I relied in large part on

loans from abroad.
construction.
inflation.
farming.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
construction.

Explanation: In the post–World War I boom (especially the 1920s), much of U.S. growth came from construction — housing, commercial buildings, roads and infrastructure tied to the auto industry — along with consumer durables and credit. The U.S. became a creditor nation (it lent to Europe), farmers were generally depressed, and rampant inflation was not the main driver.