A historical account of the relationship between the federal
government and merchant capital in the formative years of the American
Republic. In the wake of the American Revolution, if you had asked a
citizen whether his fledgling state would survive more than two
centuries, the answer would have been far from confident. The problem,
as is so often the case, was money. Left millions of dollars of debt
by the war, the nascent federal government created a system of taxes
on imported goods and installed custom houses at the nation’s ports,
which were charged with collecting these fees. Gradually, the houses
amassed enough revenue from import merchants to stabilize the new
government. But, as the fragile United States was dependent on this
same revenue, the merchants at the same time gained outsized influence
over the daily affairs of customs houses. As the United States tried
to police this commerce in the early nineteenth century, the
merchants’ stranglehold on custom house governance proved to be
formidable. In National Duties, Gautham Rao makes the case that the
origins of the federal government and the modern American state lie in
these conflicts at government custom houses between the American
Revolution and the presidency of Andrew Jackson. He argues that the
contours of the government emerged from the push-and-pull between
these groups, with commercial interests gradually losing power to the
administrative state, which only continued to grow and lives on today.
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Custom Houses and the Making of the American State
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226367101
Publisert
2018
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter