No.
No, The answer is true on A+
Hourly wages for blue-collar workers rose
It set wages and negotiated with labor unions.
after world war 1 Canadian workers demanded higher wages, better working conditions and union rights.
No.
yes
true (A+)
No, The answer is true on A+
The Office of War Mobilization.
Yes
Hourly wages for blue-collar workers rose
Both A and B could be considered correct. (remained about the same and rose faster than wages)
They established caps on wages and prices, and rationed many items that were needed for the war effort.
Arthur Lyon Bowley has written: 'The change in the distribution of the national income, 1880-1913' -- subject(s): Wages, Economic conditions, Income 'The Measurement of Groups and Series: A Course of Lectures' 'Wages in the United Kingdom in the nineteenth century' -- subject(s): Wages 'Prices and wages in the United Kingdom, 1914-1920' -- subject(s): Prices, World War, 1914-1918, Wages, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of World War, 1914-1918
OPA was the Office of Price Control. It was a US agency that exercised authority to control wages and set maximum prices in the US during World War II.
The British government setting prices and determining wages.