Citation:
Dippel, Christian, and Stephan Heblich. Working Paper. “Leadership and Social Norms: Evidence from the Forty-Eighters in the Civil War”. Copy at http://www.tinyurl.com/286qbvsq
dippelheblich2018.pdf | 3.59 MB |
dippelheblich2018.pdf | 3.59 MB |
We evaluate the role of taxes on trade in the development of imperial Britain’s fiscal-military state. Influential work, e.g., Brewer’s (1989) Sinews of Power, attributed increased fiscal
capacity to the taxation of domestic, rather than traded, goods: excise revenues, coarsely
associated with domestic goods, grew faster than customs revenues. We construct new
historical revenue series disaggregating excise revenues from traded and domestic goods. We find substantial growth in taxes on traded goods, accounting for over half of indirect taxation around 1800. This challenges the conventional wisdom attributing the development of the British state to domestic factors: international factors mattered, too.