Thursday, November 28, 2019
Effects On Economy1850 To 1914 Essays - International Trade
  Effects On Economy:1850 To 1914    Effects on Trends in Trade Policy from 1850-1914  The modernizing world of 1850-1870 belonged to an age of remarkable growth  in international trade, stimulating the largest free market the world had ever  seen. Yet by 1914, only 30 years later, the trend towards liberal trade policies  had mostly ended, replaced by a revival of the protectionist system. A study of  the variation in trade policies over time shows a remarkable growth in the  power of interest groups to influence the institutional rules and regulations concerning international economic intercourse. The initial major trend can be partly attributed ternational conditions, whereas later trends are more  attributable to the relative strength of the interest groups within individual  nations and their ability to influence institutional policies. It is, however,  necessary to always consider the impact of the international economic situation  on the interest groups, as changes in the international arena often played a  significant role in determining which interest groups held power at any given  time.   A convenient starting point for looking at trends in international commerce  policy is Great Britain. Prior to the British initiative towards free trade, there  were two main barriers to trade, natural and artificial1. Natural barriers were  the long distances to be transversed and the high cost of shipping materials.  Artificial barriers included tariffs and at times direct prohibitions on the import  of certain goods. As the century progressed both barriers fell drastically due to  remarkable advances in technology and through the international leadership of  Great Britain. This lasted until the 1870s initiated the return to protectionism.   Britain, as the first serious pundit for free trade, led the initial trade liberalization  movement for several reasons. First, the philosophical roots which planted the  argument in favor of free trade came to fruition with the publication by Adam  Smith of The Wealth of Nations. This work was quickly expanded upon by  David Ricardo who postulated the concepts of absolute and comparative  advantage, and who showed that every nation involved in trade benefited. The  first group of influential people to accept and use these arguments thus arose in  Britain in the form of the international merchants and industrialists.   Britain in 1832 expanded the franchise to the urban upper middle class, of  whose numbers merchants and industrialists constituted a significant amount.  Thus at the same time the merchants were beginning to advocate a  liberalization of Britain's trade policy, they were also becoming empowered to  influence the parliamentary rules. Younger politicians intent on simplifying the  government architecture gained power as a result, including Robert Peel and  William Huskisson.   The greatest barrier to free trade in Great Britain in the 1840s were the Corn  Laws. The Corn Laws principally benefited the landed aristocracy, the  strongest group traditionally represented in Parliament. Thus the landed  aristocracy can and should be viewed as an institution as well as a separate  interest group, given their hegemony over policy within the nation for several  centuries. The rise of the merchant classes and the enfranchisement thereof  provided the catalyst necessary to promote a sweeping change of the traditional  policies.   In Britain this political turmoil led to a trend towards free trade and a demand  for the repeal of the Corn Laws by the industrialists and merchants. Richard  Cobden, an industrialist, formed the Anti-Corn Law League2 in 1839 which  created one of the first large scale campaigns to influence public opinion. The  Whig party saw the merchants as a way to gain more control in Parliament, but  failed to win the election in 1841. Tory Sir Robert Peel was elected prime  minister, already intent on making extensive changes in the fiscal system. The  Anti-Corn Law League achieved triumph in 1846, not due to their extensive  propaganda, but thanks to the Irish potato famine. Faced with mass starvation  Peel decided to introduce a bill which would permit the duty free import of grain  within a few years.   In some sense it can be argued that without the Irish famine the era of free  trade would have come substantially later if at all. As an international event it  propelled Great Britain down the path of free trade, and it is significant that the  Whigs, which became the party of the industrialists and merchants, were unable  to attain the repeal of the Corn Laws without a significant catastrophe to aid  them. In the aftermath of the potato famine, the Whigs gained power and  eventually replaced the vast majority of the tariffs with an income tax, making  Britain essentially free trade.   The interplay of events leading Britain towards free    
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