首页
登录
职称英语
Navigation Acts of Colonial AmericaP1: Throughout the colonial period, after th
Navigation Acts of Colonial AmericaP1: Throughout the colonial period, after th
游客
2025-02-05
0
管理
问题
Navigation Acts of Colonial America
P1: Throughout the colonial period, after the middle of the seventeenth century, the one great source of irritation between the mother country and her colonies was found in a number of laws, called the Navigation Acts. For example, the Navigation Acts of 1660 and 1663 forbade the importing into or the exporting from the British colonies of any goods except in English or colonial ships and it forbade certain enumerated articles— tobacco, sugar, cotton, wool, dyeing woods, etc.—to be shipped to any country, except to England or an English plantation. Similarly, the Molasses Act of 1733 placed a prohibitive duty—sixpence per gallon—on the importation of sugar from non-English colonies, forcing the American rum distillers to buy more costly sugar from the British West Indies. This act was intended less to raise revenue than to serve as a protective tariff that would benefit British West Indian sugar producers at the expense of their French rivals.
P2: The British Parliament enacted such mechanisms as protectionist trade barriers,governmental regulations, and subsidies to domestic industries for the purpose of augmenting British finances at the expense of colonial territories and other European imperial powers. But these policies ensured Great Britain’s rise as Europe’s foremost shipping nation, and in one respect greatly stimulated American industry, laying the foundations for an American shipbuilding industry and merchant marine. The shipbuilding industry in the colonies first came as an outgrowth of the British industry and then as its own entity. The swift expansion of colonial shipping in turn accelerated urbanization by creating a need for centralized docks, warehouses, and repair shops in the colonies. By 1770, Philadelphia and New York City had emerged as two of the British Empire’s busiest ports.
P3: In addition to restrictions on the trade between colonies and non-English parties, England also specified certain products that could be sold only to British merchants. Included in the list of enumerated goods were products most generally considered to England’s wealth and power: sugar, tobacco, rice, cotton, indigo, and later furs and iron. Parliament never restricted grain, livestock, fish, lumber, or rum, which altogether made up 60 percent of American colonial exports. The Act further reduced the burden on exporters of tobacco and rice—the chief mainland commodities affected—with two significant concessions. First, Parliament gave tobacco growers a monopoly over the British market by excluding foreign tobacco,even though this hurt British consumers as rice planters enjoyed a natural monopoly because they had no competitors. Second, by refunding the duties on all tobacco and rice that the colonists later shipped to other countries, Parliament minimized the added cost of land used for tobacco and rice in Britain, where customs officials collected duties on both.
P4: Another impact the navigation system had on the colonies was to encourage economic diversification. Parliament used British tax revenues to pay modest incentives to Anglo-Americans producing such items as silk, iron, dyes, hemp, and lumber, and it imposed protective tariffs on items from other commercial rivals. The trade laws did in large-scale prohibit Anglo-Americans from competing with British manufacturing for certain products, most notably clothing. However, colonial tailors, hatters, and other small clothes manufacturers could continue to make any item of dress in their households or small shops. Manufactured by low-paid labor, British clothing imports generally undersold whatever the colonists could have produced and exported.
P5: The Navigation Acts succeeded in making the colonies a protected market for low-priced exports from Britain. Steady overseas demand for colonial products spawned a prosperity that enabled colonists to consume ever larger amounts of goods—not only clothing, but dishware, home furnishings, tea, and a range of other items both produced in Britain and imported by British and colonial merchants from elsewhere. Consequently, the share of British exports sold to the colonies rapidly increased, which made Britain itself the wealthiest nation in Europe and the Atlantic world while resulting in a "consumer revolution" in British America.
P3: In addition to restrictions on the trade between colonies and non-English parties, England also specified certain products that could be sold only to British merchants. Included in the list of enumerated goods were products most generally considered to England’s wealth and power: sugar, tobacco, rice, cotton, indigo, and later furs and iron. ■ Parliament never restricted grain, livestock, fish, lumber, or rum, which altogether made up 60 percent of American colonial exports. ■ The Act further reduced the burden on exporters of tobacco and rice—the chief mainland commodities affected—with two significant concessions. ■ First, Parliament gave tobacco growers a monopoly over the British market by excluding foreign tobacco, even though this hurt British consumers as rice planters enjoyed a natural monopoly because they had no competitors. Second, by refunding the duties on all tobacco and rice that the colonists later shipped to other countries, Parliament minimized the added cost of land used for tobacco and rice in Britain, where customs officials collected duties on both. ■ [br] Paragraph 4 supports which of the following statements about why Britain did not pass laws restricting the small-scale manufacture of clothing in the colonies?
选项
A、Such clothing presented no serious competition to clothing imported from Britain.
B、The British realized that any attempt to enforce such laws would be ineffective.
C、Clothing manufactured in the American colonies generally did not sell well in Britain.
D、The quality of clothing produced in the colonies was lower than that of British clothing.
答案
A
解析
【事实信息题】末句提到英国进口布料by low—paid labor,(低人工成本)并且undersold(压价销售),可知进口布有优势,因此答案为A。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3943442.html
相关试题推荐
NavigationActsofColonialAmericaP1:Throughoutthecolonialperiod,afterth
NavigationActsofColonialAmericaP1:Throughoutthecolonialperiod,afterth
NavigationActsofColonialAmericaP1:Throughoutthecolonialperiod,afterth
NavigationActsofColonialAmericaP1:Throughoutthecolonialperiod,afterth
NavigationActsofColonialAmericaP1:Throughoutthecolonialperiod,afterth
NavigationActsofColonialAmericaP1:Throughoutthecolonialperiod,afterth
NavigationActsofColonialAmericaP1:Throughoutthecolonialperiod,afterth
AnimalBehaviorP1:Throughoutmuchofthe20thcentury,EuropeanandAmericans
AnimalBehaviorP1:Throughoutmuchofthe20thcentury,EuropeanandAmericans
AnimalBehaviorP1:Throughoutmuchofthe20thcentury,EuropeanandAmericans
随机试题
PartⅡReadingComprehension(SkimmingandScanning)Directions:Inthispart,y
[originaltext]W:MissLeetelephoned.Sheaskedifyouwouldbeabletomeethe
NeverOverprotecttheChildrenForthispart,youareallowed30minutestowrit
在我国古代开始出现城市雏形的安阳殷墟,是属于哪个朝代的?()A.夏 B.商
输血完毕后,下列叙述错误的是( )。A.对有输血反应的回报单应立即送达输血科(
露点受温度影响,但不受压力影响。()
下列关于资产评估报告及规范要求的说法中,错误的是( )。A.由资产评估专业人员对
固定资产贷款项目评估的内容包括()。A.项目建设的必要性评估 B.借款人
属于条件致病菌的细菌是A.肉毒梭菌B.酪酸梭菌C.产气荚膜梭菌D.难辨梭菌E.破
男,28岁。反复饥饿性上腹痛3年,进食及碱性药物后可缓解。腹部查体不可能存在(
最新回复
(
0
)