战前关税政治:地区联盟与经济利益的变迁

Antebellum Tariff Politics: Regional Coalitions and Shifting Economic Interests

Journal of Law & Economics · 2008
被引 26
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

分析了1830年代至内战前美国关税下降的政治经济原因,指出西部地区的立场转变是关税涨落的关键,适合研究贸易政策与政治联盟的学者。

Abstract

Throughout U.S. history, import tariffs have been put on a sustained downward path in only two instances: from the early 1830s until the Civil War and from the mid‐1930s to the present. This paper analyzes the political economy of tariff reductions in the antebellum period. Tariff politics was highly sectional: the North supported high tariffs, the South favored low tariffs, and the West was a swing region. In the 1820s, a coalition between the North and West raised tariffs by exchanging votes on import duties for spending on internal improvements. President Andrew Jackson delinked these issues by vetoing several internal improvements bills. The nullification crisis led to the Compromise Tariff of 1833, which phased out tariffs above 20 percent over a 9‐year period. By this time, transportation improvements gave the West access to foreign markets, giving the region a stake with the South in maintaining a low tariff equilibrium. Thus, the West’s changing position on trade policy helps explain the rise and fall of tariffs over this period.

美国关税政治区域联盟经济利益变迁年妥协关税