The New Nation's Economy The U.S. Constitution, adopted in 1787 and in effect to this day, was in many ways a
work of creative genius. As an economic charter, it established that the entire nation -- stretching then from
Maine to Georgia, from the Atlantic Ocean to the Mississippi Valley -- was a unified, or "common," market. There
were to be no tariffs or taxes on interstate commerce. The Constitution provided that the federal government could
regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the states, establish uniform bankruptcy laws, create money and
regulate its value, fix standards of weights and measures, establish post offices and roads, and fix rules
governing patents and copyrights. The last-mentioned clause was an early recognition of the importance of
"intellectual property," a matter that would assume great importance in trade negotiations in the late 20th
century. Alexander Hamilton, one of the nation's Founding Fathers and its first secretary of the treasury,
advocated an economic development strategy in which the federal government would nurture infant industries by
providing overt subsidies and imposing protective tariffs on imports. He also urged the federal government to
create a national bank and to assume the public debts that the colonies had incurred during the Revolutionary War.
The new government dallied over some of Hamilton's proposals, but ultimately it did make tariffs an essential part
of American foreign policy -- a position that lasted until almost the middle of the 20th century. Although early
American farmers feared that a national bank would serve the rich at the expense of the poor, the first National
Bank of the United States was 22
|