Social Sciences, asked by ishika7968, 1 year ago

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Answered by philomath27
2
Three important reasons why the non-cooperation movement gradually slowed down in the cities are as follows:

Whereas mill cloth was cheap due to mass production, khadi cloth was expensive. Hence, the urban poor couldn’t abstain from using mill cloth for too long.
Alternative Indian institutions were slow to come up. As a result the non-cooperating Indians ultimately had to go back to British institutions.
As a result, the students started attending government schools again and lawyers joined back in government courts.

Answered by Vennela2004
2

The Non-Cooperation Movement in the cities gradually slowed down for various reasons

(i) Khadi cloth was often more expensive than mass produced mill cloth and poor people could not afford to buy it.

Thus, boycott of foreign goods could not continue for long.

(ii) Similarly, the boycott of British institutions posed a problem. No alternative institutions were set-up in their place. So, the students, teachers and other professionals finally had to resume their studies and jobs in government institutions like schools, colleges, courts etc.

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