Economy, asked by haikhan512, 2 months ago

In Germany in 2009 there was considerable debate about the extent to which the government should
be intervening in the economy. For example, its citizens were worried about the future of Opel, a
German car brand that was part of the ailing General Motors. Some wanted the government to make
sure jobs were saved no matter what. Others, however, were more hesitant and worried about
becoming the government becoming too interventionist. Traditionally since the Second World War
the German government has seen itself as a referee in market issues and has avoided trying to control
parts of the economy. It would regulate anti-competitive behaviour, for example, but not try to run
many industries. However in the recession of 2009 when the economy was shrinking the government
was forced to spend more to stimulate demand and had to intervene heavily to save the banking
sector from collapse. The government also had to offer aid to businesses to keep them alive.

Answers

Answered by Manishgreatboy
0

Answer:

Cytoplasm, the semifluid substance of a cell that is external to the nuclear membrane and internal to the cellular membrane, sometimes described as the nonnuclear content of protoplasm. In eukaryotes (i.e., cells having a nucleus), the cytoplasm contains all of the organelles.

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