Lower prices + more jobs → more buying → consumer boom.
Electricity + ads = gadgets people want (and buy).
Wealth builds institutions; migration reshapes where people live.
Boom overall, but many stayed just below the poverty line.
Tech + electricity + marketing + cheap credit + jobs → consumers → boom.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1926 | Airline passengers were less than 6,000 before rising later. |
| 1928 | 1 in 6 Americans had cars. |
| 1929 | Airline passengers reached approximately 173,000. |
Who benefited from the 1920s boom
| Group | Typical outcome |
|---|---|
| Many Americans overall | Life improved for the majority, but not all. |
| Farmers | Generally did not enjoy the prosperity. |
| Black Americans | Generally did not enjoy the prosperity; also migrated in large numbers. |
| Immigrants | Generally did not enjoy the prosperity. |
| Workers in traditional industries | Generally did not enjoy the prosperity. |
| Working-class women | Generally did not enjoy the prosperity. |
Testez vos connaissances sur The Roaring Twenties Economic Boom avec 10 questions à choix multiples avec corrections détaillées.
1. What was a key effect of Henry Ford’s conveyor belt and assembly-line system on factory production?
2. What does mass production primarily refer to in the context of the 1920s industrial expansion?
Mémorisez les concepts clés de The Roaring Twenties Economic Boom avec 9 flashcards interactives.
Mass production — effect?
Lower prices, higher output, consumer boom.
Mass production: Target-language label
Manufacturing large quantities of standard products
Electrification — role?
Powered gadgets and expanded consumer technologies.
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