because it decreased in demand for farm products
[1] Farmers faced hard times in the Postwar Boom. Family farms found it hard to compete with "big business farms" and many failed.[2] The poor found themselves to be even worse off after the war despite the economic boom that was going on around them.
In the post-war period, the automobile industry successfully converted back to producing cars, but small family farms found it increasingly difficult to compete with large "factory" farms spurred by technological advances, and many farmers left the land.
Postwar teens were a major target group of businesses
During the post-war years the middle class was growing in numbers.
Prices for crops decreased, and costs for farmers increased
The postwar period was difficult for farmers because of falling food prices.
The US became the world's largest debtor nation
growing in numbers....
Keiko Minai has written: 'Continuity and modernization in postwar Japan: a comparative analysis of farmers and urban employees'
For several reasons, soil exhaustion, farmers growing crops for hundreds of years, over time it became more difficult for farmers to produce enough food to support the population
[1] Farmers faced hard times in the Postwar Boom. Family farms found it hard to compete with "big business farms" and many failed.[2] The poor found themselves to be even worse off after the war despite the economic boom that was going on around them.
JAZZ!!
Jazz
jazz
Farmers might find it difficult to raise crops in the northeast for a few reasons. One reason could easily be the rocky soil.
Alfred Kinsley
apathetic about colonial-British relations.