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Im pretty sure its "the nations finances"
One weakness was that at the time, taxes were optional, so Congress didn't have enough money to pay for the millions of dollars that it owed individuals and foreign countries.
One of the major problems with the Articles of Confederation was the fact that the government had difficulty raising revenue. This made for a very weak central government.
The government only had one branch.
The US Constitution created a strong central federal government as opposed to the state-centered Articles of Confederation. The new government would have powers of taxation, printing money, treaties, a standing military, and regulation of interstate commerce. It would become the law of the land and supersede any conflicting state laws.
the nations fiances
Im pretty sure its "the nations finances"
The government only had one branch and lacked the ability to tax and draft.
Weakness: states had more power than the central government, they congress could not form an army Strengnth: first unified government after the revolution
One weakness was that at the time, taxes were optional, so Congress didn't have enough money to pay for the millions of dollars that it owed individuals and foreign countries.
One vote for each state
One of the major problems with the Articles of Confederation was the fact that the government had difficulty raising revenue. This made for a very weak central government.
There were multiple weaknesses behind the failure and downfall of the Confederate States of America. The chief of which was an economic system of plantations and forced labor that was not sustainable, coupled with a lack of heavy industrial and rail capacity, in comparison to the Northern States.
It did not provide for an executive or judicial branch.
The government only had one branch.
Yea
The US Constitution created a strong central federal government as opposed to the state-centered Articles of Confederation. The new government would have powers of taxation, printing money, treaties, a standing military, and regulation of interstate commerce. It would become the law of the land and supersede any conflicting state laws.