73-476 AMERICAN ECONOMIC HISTORY: TOPIC 4 

- The Constitution as an Economic Document
- Article I Section 8: Enumerated Powers of Congress
- General Welfare Clause and Common Market
- Commerce Clause
- Uniform Bankruptcy Law
- State Debt Deal and D.C.
- Necessary and Proper Clause
- Article I Section 9
- Direct Taxes
- Common Market cannot be Limited by States
- No Appropriations Without Act of Congress
- Article I Section 10
- States Cannot Limit Contracts
- States Cannot Have Tariffs or Treaties
- Article IV Section I: All States Must Respect Each Others' Laws To Ensure a
Common Market
- Article VI
- Revolution Debt Will be Honored
- U.S. Law Supreme Law of the Land
- Amendment 5 (1791): Due Process and the "Takings" Clause
- Amendment 14 (1868): Repudiation of Confederate War Debt
- Amendment 16 (1913): Income Tax Amendment
- Hamilton's Economic Program
- Debt Assumption
- Continental Congress Debt
- Domestic Debt: $40.4m ($27.4 principal, $13 interest)
Paid With 3 Types of Coupon Bonds
- Foreign Debt: $11.7m ($10.1 principal, $1.6 interest)
Paid With Specie to French and Dutch
- State Debt: $26.6m
- Political Deal Between Hamilton and Jefferson/Madison -- D.C. For
State Debt Assumption
- 81% Paid With 3 Types of Coupon Bonds
- National Bank
- Purpose
- Supply Paper Notes for Commerical Transactions
- Short Term Loans To Government
- Repository for Government Funds
- Loans to Individuals so they Could Pay Taxes
- Madison and Jefferson Claim Its Unconstitutional. Hamilton Prevails
- 20 Year Charter
- $10m in Capital: $8m Private, $2m US
- Excise Taxes
- Annual Interest on Bonds was approx. $2m yearly 1791-1795 or one-half
Government Expenditures
- Whiskey Tax and Whiskey Rebellion (1794)
- Salt, Coal, Boots, Shoes, etc., used to pay Interest on Debt
- Hamilton's Policies Favored New England and Coastal Cities at Expense of
Interior Farmers
- Tariffs
- 1789 - 1860 Over 90% of U.S. Government Revenue From Tariffs
- A Tariff is a Tax Paid by Consumers on Imported Goods
- Losers From Tariffs
- National Income Falls
- Prices on Competing Goods Rise
- American Exporters Lose Business
- Winners From Tariffs
- Government Tax Revenue Increases (Initially!)
- Domestic Producers
- Domestic Labor in Protected Industry
- Tariffs Persist Because Benefits are Concentrated and Costs Dispersed
Which Make them Politically Attractive
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