- Hamilton tariff
-
The Hamilton Tariff (ch. 2, 1 Stat. 24, enacted July 4, 1789, also called the Tariff of 1789) was the second statute ever enacted by the new federal government of the United States. Most of the rates of the revenue tariff were between 5 and 10 percent, depending on the value of the item. Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton was anxious to establish the tariff as a regular source of government revenue and to encourage the growth of domestic manufacturing to lessen America's then-heavy dependence on foreign-made products.
The Hamilton Tariff and much of Hamilton's financial plan can be attributed as one of the causes of the schism in the Federalist Party. It facilitated the growth of Northern manufacturers by having the imported goods absorb the federal treasury's financial needs but harmed Southern farmers by making foreign-made products more expensive. This factor was one of the major causes of the Civil War.
Tax Acts of the United States Internal
Revenue1861 · 1862 · 1864 · 1913 · 1916 · 1917 · 1918 · 1921 · 1924 · 1926 · 1928 · 1932 · 1934 · 1935 · 1936 · 1940 · 1940 · 1941 · 1942 · 1943 · 1943 · 1944 · 1945 · 1948 · 1950 · 1950 · 1951 · 1954 · 1954 Code · 1962 · 1964 · 1968 · 1969 · 1971 · 1975 · 1976 · 1977 · 1978 · 1981 · 1982 · Gas Tax · 1984 · COBRA · 1986 · 1986 Code · 1990 · 1993 · 1996 · 1997 · 1998 · 2001 · 2002 · 2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2008 · Crisis · 2009 · 2010Tariffs 1789: Hamilton I · 1790: Hamilton II · 1792: Hamilton III · 1816: Dallas · 1824: Sectional · 1828: "Abominations" · 1832 · 1833: Compromise · 1842: Black · 1846: Walker · 1857 · 1861: Morrill · 1872 · 1875 · 1883: Mongrel · 1890: McKinley · 1894: Wilson–Gorman · 1897: Dingley · 1909: Payne-Aldrich · 1913: Underwood · 1921: Emergency · 1922: Fordney-McCumber · 1930: Smoot-Hawley · 1934: Reciprocal · 1948: GATT · 1962 · 1974/75 · 1979 · 1984 · 1988 · 1988: Canada FT · 1993: NAFTA · 1994: WTO · 2002: SteelCategories:- 1789 in law
- 1789 in the United States
- United States federal trade legislation
- United States federal taxation legislation
- 1st United States Congress
- 1789 in international relations
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.