Respuesta :
It permitted farmers to produce fewer farm goods, thus raising prices.
This New Deal policy was established in the Agricultural Adjustment Act (1933). Under this statute, the Government would pay farmers for cutting back production by about 30 percent of corn, wheat, cotton, rice, peanuts, tobacco, milk and others, in order to even the balance of supply and demand for farm commodities, which would cause a rising of prices and would eventually increase the farmer's purchasing power and would contribute to America's economic welfare as well.