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The History of Tariff Administration in the United States - From Colonial Times to the McKinley Administrative Bill (Hardcover)
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The History of Tariff Administration in the United States - From Colonial Times to the McKinley Administrative Bill (Hardcover)
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A Comprehensive History of the Tariff System in the United
StatesGoss traces the tariff system through three avatars that
often existed simultaneously: protective, preventive and punitive.
From an ineffective colonial system that allowed importers to avoid
payment through extended credit arrangements, to a somewhat less
troubled system that demanded immediate cash payments in the early
1840s, to a punitive system designed to stymie smugglers during the
Civil War, the collection of tariff duties was always problematic.
This problem was enhanced in the wake of industrialization and
protectionism when direct taxes began to supplant indirect taxation
as the major source of government finance. Reviewing the history of
American tariff regulation, Goss discerns a gradual process towards
"more stringent supervision, regulation and control" (88).
Originally published in the series Studies in History, Economics
and Public Law edited by the Political Science Faculty of Columbia
University.John Dean Goss (1869-?) served as a judge in Wisconsin.
He later moved to Oregon, where he practiced law.Contents
IntroductionCHAPTER I. The Colonial Period 1. Virginia customs
administration 2. Massachusetts customs administration 3. New York
customs administration CHAPTER II. The National Tariff
Administration of the Eighteenth Century1. Customs officers 2.
Entry of goods and collection of duties 3. System established by
act of 1799 CHAPTER III. The Development of the System Established
by the Act of 1799 up to the Civil War 1. Prevention of
undervaluation 2. The auction system 3. Appraisement reforms of
1830 4. Payment of duties in cash 5. The "similitude section" and
the warehouse system 6. The administrative remedy by appeal to the
Secretary of the Treasury CHAPTER IV. Tariff Administration from
the Civil War to 18901. Attack on the warehouse system 2.
Triplicate invoices 3. Dutiable value 4. Appraisement at the port
of New York5. Transportation in bond 6. Special agents and general
orders 7. Searches and seizures 8. Compensation of customs officers
9. Repeal of the moieties clause 10. Repeal of discrimination
against goods from the far East 11. Dutiable value and similitude
section under the act of 1883 12. Classification of sugars under
the act of 1883 13. Passengers' baggage CHAPTER V. The McKinley
Administrative Bill of 1890 1. General purposes of the late tariff
acts 2. Increased stringency of provisions to prevent fraud 3.
Remedies against appraisement and classification 4. Abolition of
damage allowances 5. Manufacturing in bond and drawbacks 6.
Abolition of fees CONCLUSION. General Tendencies of Tariff
Administration in the United States
General
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