Setting up efficient production
Setting up efficient production
Setting up efficient production
no
The WPB, or War Production Board, was established in the United States for the purpose of supervising war production during the Second World War. It was created by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
When and how did the United States say that there was no longer a "Frontier"?
A frontier is an area of unexplored land close to or near a states borders
The purpose of the board was to regulate the production and allocation of materials and fuel during World War II in the United States. The WPB converted and expanded peacetime industries to meet war needs, allocated scarce materials vital to war production, established priorities in the distribution of materials and services, and prohibited nonessential production.
States within the northern frontier region of the United States include Alaska, Washington, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan.
Since the Pony Express, frontier communications have been handled by the United States Postal Service, which was created as part of the United States Constitution in 1789.
The law of increasing opportunity costs states that as production of a product increases, the cost to produce an additional unit of that product increases as well. This law is responsible for the bowed shape of the production possibilities curve. Because not all of our economy's resources are equally well-suited to the production of a single good, the increasing opportunity cost is present.
By the time there was a western frontier the United States was established and the British had no interests.
The Buffer States - or, somewhat more controversially, the Border States (implying that there was an official frontier.)