In this episode Tony Hines takes a look at tariffs, trade policies and how they impact supply chains. Is managing international trade through the blunt instrument of tariffs and quotas fit for purpose in the 21st Century? Should governments be looking for better ways to facilitate trade? We begin by examining a brief history of tariffs by taking a look at how they developed as an instrument to grow the British Empire in the 18th Century and how tariffs became the genesis for the United States to exist.
When Adam Smith published his influential book the first about political economy Britain had an empire that stretched around the globe. An empire that was protected by favourable trade policies to the benefit of the East India Trading Company established in 1601. There was much interest from France under Napoleon and from Prussia in Smith’s ideas. The system of market regulation based on tariffs and quotas was known as Mercantilism. Governments thought that they could regulate trade to their benefit whilst simultaneously deriving income from taxes. The system developed a complicated elaborate structure of customs duties on imports and exports. What these taxes actually did was create monopolies for certain interested parties particularly the British East India Company.
At the time Smith was attacking the Mercantilist policies there was a dispute brewing in the American colonies over Tea Trade. A minister of the Crown with responsibility for the thirteen colonies in America wanted to tax tea and enforce regulations on a variety of commodities to the letter so that Britain could make them pay taxes to support the cost of their own defence. These enforced regulations were unenforceable at a distance of 3,000 miles and the states had little ability to regulate them in the ways demanded by the British. Earlier in the eighteenth century the British Government had implemented a range of taxes on the cotton trade which woollen manufacturers promoted to protect their trade in textiles. Arguments grew louder after the publication of Smith’s Wealth of Nations and free trade became the mantra (Laissez-faire – let it alone). Businesses argued that these were not matters for the state to concern itself with. Mercantilism was abandoned and Will
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About Tony Hines and the Chain Reaction Podcast – All About Supply Chain Advantage
I have been researching and writing about supply chains for over 25 years. I wrote my first book on supply chain strategies in the early 2000s. The latest edition is published in 2024 available from Routledge, Amazon and all good book stores. Each week we have special episodes on particular topics relating to supply chains. We have a weekly news round up every Saturday at 12 noon...