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War, wine, and taxes : the political economy of Anglo-French trade, 1689-1900

Part of the The Princeton Economic History of the Western World series
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In "War, Wine, and Taxes", John Nye debunks the myth that Britain was a free-trade nation during and after the industrial revolution, by revealing how the British used tariffs - notably on French wine - as a mercantilist tool to politically weaken France and to respond to pressure from local brewers and others.

The book reveals that Britain did not transform smoothly from a mercantilist state in the eighteenth century to a bastion of free trade in the late nineteenth.

This boldly revisionist account gives the first satisfactory explanation of Britain's transformation from a minor power to the dominant nation in Europe.

It also shows how Britain and France negotiated the critical trade treaty of 1860 that opened wide the European markets in the decades before World War I. Going back to the seventeenth century and examining the peculiar history of Anglo-French military and commercial rivalry, Nye helps us understand why the British drink beer not wine, why the Portuguese sold liquor almost exclusively to Britain, and how liberal, eighteenth-century Britain managed to raise taxes at an unprecedented rate - with government revenues growing five times faster than the gross national product. "War, Wine, and Taxes" stands in stark contrast to standard interpretations of the role tariffs played in the economic development of Britain and France, and sheds valuable new light on the joint role of commercial and fiscal policy in the rise of the modern state.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691129177 / 9780691129174
Hardback
22/07/2007
United States
English
200 p. : ill.
23 cm
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In War, Wine, and Taxes John Nye overturns the widespread belief that Britain promoted the free trade that eventually brought so many benefits in the nineteenth century. Britain, it turns out, was surprisingly protectionist, and the political economy of its tariffs has left a mark on French winemaking and on British pubs that still survives today. -- Philip T. Hoffman, author of "Growth in a Traditional Society: The French Countryside, 1450-1815" The humorist Artemus Ward famously said, 'It ain't so much the things we don't know that get us into trouble. It's the things we do know that just ai
In War, Wine, and Taxes John Nye overturns the widespread belief that Britain promoted the free trade that eventually brought so many benefits in the nineteenth century. Britain, it turns out, was surprisingly protectionist, and the political economy of its tariffs has left a mark on French winemaking and on British pubs that still survives today. -- Philip T. Hoffman, author of "Growth in a Traditional Society: The French Countryside, 1450-1815" The humorist Artemus Ward famously said, 'It ain't so much the things we don't know that get us into trouble. It's the things we do know that just ai 1DB British Isles, 1DDF France, 3JF c 1700 to c 1800, 3JH c 1800 to c 1900, KCLT International trade, KCZ Economic history