The passage used to answer the questions is:
When the [crisis] struck, nationalists were quick to identify the cause in [economic liberalism]. . . . As the crisis spread from country to country, global commerce and the gold standard increasingly came under attack. Once praised as the engine of economic progress and prosperity, international trade was now viewed as a source of foreign contagion. More than ever before, the nations economy had to be protected from cheap goods from abroad, and saved from reliance on foreign materials. [Governments raised tariffs] and each time a government [did so], it increased the pressure on others to do likewise. This generated considerable hostility. . . . The failure to cooperate in the face of the economic threat of the early 1930s was a harbinger of the inability of the powers to work together to deal with the threat of aggressive nationalism in the latter part of the decade.
The passage is by John E. Moser, United States historian, book published in 2015
a) Identify a piece of evidence that Moser uses in the passage to support his claim regarding nationalist perceptions of liberal economic policies.
b) Explain a development in the late 1930s and early 1940s that could be used to support Mosers argument in the last sentence of the passage.
c) Explain an economic policy, other than those mentioned in the passage, that governments in Western Europe and North America adopted in the 1930s to address the economic crisis referred to in the passage.