Blessings Glorious Watchmen, Prayer Warriors, Intercessors, Saints,
Tariff History! The Truth will set you free and also help you to come higher into the courts of heaven and into agreement with the Lord on this economic issue. Pray His Kingdom economy to come forth into the new world economy structure. Christ in you the hope of Glory.
Passover Shalom.
Love & Light, Janet
________________________________________________________________
Tariff History – American Minute with Bill Federer

It is mentioned in the U.S. Constitution, Article I, Section 8, which authorizes the Federal government to collect “duties” and “imposts” to help “pay the debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States.”
The fastest ships of the day were called “cutters,” and since the Coast Guard was helping collect government revenue these vessels were called “Revenue Cutters.”
In the 1700s, the industrial revolution began in Britain. Britain burned coal, but coal mines would fill up with water.

Soon factories produced textiles very inexpensively.
During the colonial period, Britain discouraged manufacturing in the American colonies to ensure factories in England had a larger market for their products.
After the Revolution, U.S. tariffs made British goods more expensive, allowing the industrial revolution to spread in America.

“It may be … the duty of all to submit to this sacrifice … to pay for a time an impost on the importation of certain articles, in order to encourage their manufacture at home.”
Factories sprang up in America, particularly in the northern states.
Steam engines powered “spinning jennies” made yarn, and enormous looms made textiles such as cotton, wool and shoes.
Factories made items from chemicals to clocks, and manufactured machinery, such as mechanical reapers and farm equipment, which allowed farmers to plant and harvest crops using less manual labor. This resulted in lower food prices. Americans experienced the fastest rise in the standard of living in human history.
Factories, most notably, freed women up from menial tasks, such as spinning thread, weaving cloth, and sewing clothes. Now they could buy bolts of cloth made in factories, or even ready-to-wear clothes. Instead of washing clothes in washtubs and hanging them out to dry on clotheslines, they could own a washing machine and a dryer.
Instead of drawing water from a well and carrying it in buckets, they could have pipes bring water directly into the house. Instead of outhouses there was indoor plumbing.
Tariffs not only brought revenue into the Federal government the many factories provided jobs for the waves of immigrants.
From 1792 to 1812, tariffs were around 12.5 percent. After the War of 1812, tariffs went to 25 percent. By 1820, tariffs were at 40 percent, and by 1860, at 60 percent.
“Happily, I have no occasion to suggest any radical changes in the financial policy of the Government. Ours is almost, if not absolutely, the solitary power of Christendom having a surplus revenue drawn immediately from imposts on commerce.”
In March 1962, Ben B. Seligman wrote for Commentary Magazine, “Tariffs, the Kennedy Administration, and American Politics,” stating:
“In the early years of the Republic, all but about $20,000 of the $4.5 million of Treasury income stemmed from tariff levies. Up to the Civil War, in fact, over 90 per cent of the federal government’s receipts came from tariffs.”

Tariffs continued to be the main source of income for the U.S. government through the early 1900s, reaching at times as high as 95 percent.
Carver’s report helped convince Congress to pass the Fordney-McCumber Tariff Bill in 1922, followed by the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Bill in 1930.

Income tax was initially a one percent tax on the top one percent richest people.
The unexpected fallout of FDR raising taxes was “outsourcing.”
To avoid FDR’s taxes, many business owners moved their factories overseas where there was lower taxes, cheaper labor, less government regulation, and fewer lawsuits.
Loss of American factories meant a loss of American jobs, causing unemployment to rise.
As overseas factories became more profitable, they used their profits to lobby American politicians to vote for even lower tariffs so they could bring their foreign made goods back into the U.S. cheaper.
This policy was called “free trade.” But was it fair trade?
Then they would import these goods into America and sell them at a lower price, undercutting American factories and forcing many out of business.
