Yes
The South was a cash crop economy of cotton and tobacco.
The basis of the economy in the Southern American colonies was tobacco and cotton exports. As the colonies expanded westward, and later when much of the South was part of the USA, cotton exports expanded. There was demand for cotton in England as well as in the New England textile mills.
Cotton and sugar primarily, also tobacco.
timber,tobacco and cotton
Cotton and tobacco.
Primarily, cotton and tobacco.
Cotton and cotton alone. That's why they needed so many foreign imports, so when the Northern-dominated Congress raised the tariff on imported goods (to protect US manufacturing industry, which was all in the North), the Southern states saw it as a hostile tax on the South.
cotton was large selling crop. Most of South Carolina's money came from cotton.
The south was an economy based on cotton, rice, indigo, and tobacco. If you look at the number of bales of cotton produced after the cotton gin was invented there is a direct relationship between the number of slaves and bales of cotton. Much of the cotton was sold to England and it was thought by the planters that the English would come to aid them in the civil war. The truth was the cotton wasn't needed by England because they all ready a lot in storage. The fact that the southern economy was not industrial is a big factor in loosing the civil war and the problems in recovery from the war.
Tanzania primarily exports agricultural products such as tobacco, coffee, cotton, tea, and cashews.
New England's cash crop is tobacco,sugar,indiago,cotton,and rice.
The major crops in the deep south were cotton, tobacco, rice, and sugar cane. These crops were grown in large plantations and played a significant role in the region's economy during the antebellum period.