Setting the Stage

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Intro | United States Tariff History | Setting the Stage | The Harding Years | Election of 1928 | Hearings & Proceedings | Aftermath | Lessons | References | Bibliography




The onset World War I brought along the end of the first period of globalization, known as Globalization I, as most of the great powers of the time were enthralled in the power struggle in Europe between the Allies and the Central Powers. This was accompanied by subsequent collapses of international trade and investment, and the disruption and isolation of global markets (1)



After the intense fighting ended, the portrait of the world changed drastically.

  • The Allied Countries wanted reparations from the Central Powers, covering the Allies' Wartime Expenses
  • In Germany and Austria, two of the losing countries hit the hardest, the economies experienced uncontrollable downward spirals. Forced with the crippling weight of wartime reparations, the Austrian and German goverments simply printed more and more money, leading to hyperinflation.
  • In America, public opinion turned towards a policy combining nationalism and isolationism, hoping to keep America out of conflicts like World War I. The Republican Party, complete with their Protectionist platform, gained the majority in Congress in 1918, and took control of the White House in 1920 with the election of Warren Harding.



This set the stage for the adoption of the Fordney-McCumber Tariff Act of 1922, which raised tariff rates by an average of 42%.
Under this new tariff law, the United States experienced rapid growth between 1922 and 1928. By 1928, real GDP was 1.4 times larger than it was in 1913, and the US Economy as a whole was eight times larger in 1928 than in 1870