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Read the passage below and answer the following questions. Since the early 1970’s, historians have begun to devote serious attention to the working class in the United States. Yet while we now have studies of working-class communities and culture, we know remarkably little of work-lessness. When historians have paid any attention at all to unemployment, they have focused on the Great Depression of the 1930’s. The narrowness of this perspective ignores the pervasive recessions and joblessness of the previous decades, as Alexander Keyssar shows in his recent book. Examining the period 1870-1920, Keyssar concentrates on Massachusetts, where the historical materials are particularly rich, and the findings applicable to other industrial areas. The unemployment rates that Keyssar calculates appear to be relatively modest, at least by Great Depression standards: during the worst years, in the 1870’s and 1890’s, unemployment was around 15 percent. Yet Keyssar rightly understands that a better way to measure the impact of unemployment is to calculate unemployment frequencies—measuring the percentage of workers who experience any unemployment in the course of a year. Given this perspective, joblessness looms much larger. Keyssar also scrutinizes unemployment patterns according to skill level, ethnicity, race, age, class, and gender. He finds that rates of joblessness differed primarily according to class: those in middle-class and white-collar occupations were far less likely to be unemployed. Yet the impact of unemployment on a specific class was not always the same. Even when dependent on the same trade, adjoining communities could have dramatically different unemployment rates. Keyssar uses these differential rates to help explain a phenomenon that has puzzled historians—the startlingly high rate of geographical mobility in the nineteenth-century United States. But mobility was not the dominant working-class strategy for coping with unemployment, nor was assistance from private charities or state agencies. Self-help and the help of kin got most workers through jobless spells. While Keyssar might have spent more time developing the implications of his findings on joblessness for contemporary public policy, his study, in its thorough research and creative use of quantitative and qualitative evidence, is a model of historical analysis
Which of the following statements about the unemployment rate during the Great Depression can be inferred from the passage?
It was sometimes higher than 15 percent.
It has been analysed seriously only since the early 1970’s.
It can be calculated more easily than can unemployment frequency.
It was never as high as the rate during the 1870’s
- Option 1: The passage mentions that unemployment rates during the worst years of the 1870s and 1890s were about 15 percent, which by Great Depression standards were modest. This implies that Great Depression unemployment rates were sometimes higher than 15 percent.
- Correct Answer: It was sometimes higher than 15 percent.
- Option 2: The passage states that historians have focused on the Great Depression since the early 1970s, but it doesn’t imply that the unemployment rate itself has only been analyzed since then.
- Option 3: No comparison is made in the passage between calculating unemployment rates and unemployment frequencies regarding ease.
- Option 4: The historical comparison made in the passage indicates only that Great Depression rates were higher; it doesn’t state that they were never as high as the 1870s.
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By: Munesh Kumari ProfileResourcesReport error
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