Friday, October 5, 2007

On Mercantilism


Mercantilism was the theory that gathering the limited supply of wealth in the world is vital to the survival of a nation; thus mercantilists insisted on very strict government control of trade and commerce. Well, if that's the case then the Stamp Act, Tea Tax, and all other impositions by the British government on trade in the Colonies make sense. The same taxes et alia were imposed in Britain to almost 3 times the amount they were in the colonies, yet Britain didn't revolt. Why not? B/c the colonists had discovered how wealthy they could become if the government left them the hell alone. So our entire Revolution owes a big tip of the hat to the laissez-faire economics that runs in opposition to mercantilism.







Moreover, in our century (20th) FDR tried the same trick as King George; the New Deal laid a heavy series of taxes and controls on big commerce and trade and consolidated American votes in Washington with the excuse that they were "looking out for the little guy." They weren't. It was mercantilism under another form. And the damage that FDR did to the economy and the government didn't even begin to be undone until Reaganomics in the 1980s.

2 comments:

  1. To be fair to Roosevelt, he was concerned that there was going to be a communist takeover of this country, and his actions took the teeth out of that movement.

    However, we are still paying the price for what he did. And for what the genuine commies did...

    ReplyDelete
  2. For all the latest commie plots go here:
    http://www.thepeoplescube.com/

    ReplyDelete


There be dragons!