Which of the following is the best comparison of primary and secondary economic activities?(1 point)

Responses

Primary economic activities involve the use of raw materials to produce finished goods, while secondary economic activities involve the sale and marketing of those goods.
Primary economic activities involve the use of raw materials to produce finished goods, while secondary economic activities involve the sale and marketing of those goods.

Secondary economic activities involve extraction and production of raw materials, while primary economic activities involve the use of raw materials to produce finished goods.
Secondary economic activities involve extraction and production of raw materials, while primary economic activities involve the use of raw materials to produce finished goods.

Primary economic activities involve the sale and marketing of goods, while secondary economic activities involve the extraction of raw materials.
Primary economic activities involve the sale and marketing of goods, while secondary economic activities involve the extraction of raw materials.

Primary economic activities involve extraction and production of raw materials, while secondary economic activities involve the use of raw materials to produce finished goods.
Primary economic activities involve extraction and production of raw materials, while secondary economic activities involve the use of raw materials to produce finished goods.
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7 answers

The best comparison of primary and secondary economic activities is:

Primary economic activities involve extraction and production of raw materials, while secondary economic activities involve the use of raw materials to produce finished goods.

This accurately distinguishes the roles of each sector: primary activities focus on obtaining natural resources, while secondary activities involve manufacturing and processing those resources into finished products.

An economy focused on secondary economic activities tends to lead to which population distribution?(1 point)
Responses

dispersed
dispersed

even
even

sparse
sparse

clustered

An economy focused on secondary economic activities tends to lead to a clustered population distribution.

This is because secondary economic activities, such as manufacturing, often require significant infrastructure and labor, leading to the concentration of populations in urban areas where these industries are located.

Which of the following forms a theory explaining the Great Atlantic Migration?(1 point)
Responses

political push factors in Europe due to governmental instability
political push factors in Europe due to governmental instability

environmental pull factors in the U.S. held a desirable climate
environmental pull factors in the U.S. held a desirable climate

economic push factors in Europe resulting from crop failures
economic push factors in Europe resulting from crop failures

economic pull factors in Europe due to industrial growth
economic pull factors in Europe due to industrial growth

The statement that best forms a theory explaining the Great Atlantic Migration is:

economic push factors in Europe resulting from crop failures.

This acknowledges that economic hardships, such as crop failures, motivated people to emigrate from Europe, seeking better opportunities and living conditions in the United States.

Analysis of the Great Atlantic Migration identifies industrial developments and failures at home as factors in European migration to the United States in the 1800s. Which of the following examples has occurred due to similar reasons?(1 point)
Responses

the forced migration in Mozambique due to Tropical Cyclone Idai
the forced migration in Mozambique due to Tropical Cyclone Idai

displacement due to conflict following the partition of India in 1947
displacement due to conflict following the partition of India in 1947

migration from developing countries to the industrialized West since the 1960s
migration from developing countries to the industrialized West since the 1960s

refugees migrating due to the Syrian Civil War
refugees migrating due to the Syrian Civil War
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The example that has occurred due to similar reasons as the Great Atlantic Migration is:

migration from developing countries to the industrialized West since the 1960s.

This migration has often been driven by economic push factors, such as lack of job opportunities or industrial developments in the migrants' home countries, and economic pull factors in more developed, industrialized nations.