230: Trade and Commerce 1890-1914 Flashcards

1
Q

What was the approximate proportion of imports from the empire in 1913?

A

25% of imports from empire

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2
Q

What was the approximate percentage of exports to the empire in 1913?

A

35/40% of exports were to the empire.

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3
Q

Name some economic pro-empire arguments?

A
  • Allows for importation of cheap goods people want.
  • Creates markets for British goods, driving domestic production.
  • Foodstuff and raw materials could be imported cheaper and power industrial development.
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4
Q

Name some economic anti-empire arguments?

A
  • Empire costs more than it provides benefits, e.g defence costs. (especially for middle class).
  • Stops Britain from modernising by relying on imports instead of technological development.
  • Undermines domestic production with cheap imports, driving wages down in Britain.
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5
Q

What empire organisation was founded in 1884, but disbanded only 9 years later? Why is this significant?

A

The Imperial Federation league, shows lack of interest in colonial ties as this period begins.

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6
Q

With which countries/regions was British trade increasing during this period?

A

Foreign nations (outside the empire), especially USA.

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7
Q

How economically significant was India to Britain during this period?

A

Took 20% of British exports, and also exported vast quantities of tea and raw cotton to Britain.

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8
Q

What happened to British investment between 1900 and 1913? What does this show?

A

It doubled from £2 million to £4. A diversification in the way Britain made money.

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9
Q

Why was Britain loaning to and investing in foreign nations more than empire ones?

A

Empire loans were safer, but foreign ones would provide larger returns. Also wary of loans to empire being used to develop industries that would rival those in Britain.

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10
Q

Which 1899 and 1900 acts promoted infrastructure projects in Africa? Name an example of a project.

A

Colonial loans act (1899), Colonial stocks act (1900). Rail links to Africa’s interior.

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11
Q

What was the effect of mercantilism on the colonies?

A
  • Huge tariffs forced local people out of business.

- The system encouraged use of cheap labour, damaging to indigenous people.

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12
Q

What was the effect of free trade on the empire?

A
  • Promoted growth and industrialisation as countries could ship their own goods.
  • Trade and profit was less guaranteed, trade routes weren’t protected.
  • Trade was less controlled but Britain could still use military threat to get its way.
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13
Q

What would the effect of Chamberlains proposed imperial preference have been on the empire?

A
  • Boosted exports and local industrialisation in dominions.
  • Could’ve put strain on those communities to produce for exporting to Britain.
  • Trade tariffs would be fixed.
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14
Q

What was the significance of mercantilism for Britain?

A
  • Britain was the centre of trade with control over who shipped what where.
  • Allowed British businesses, especially merchants, priority.
  • Restricted the growth of Britain’s colonies.
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15
Q

What was the significance of free trade for Britain?

A
  • More products available in Britain.
  • Less traffic for Britain’s ships and ports.
  • More trade from informal empire.
  • Britain’s colonies were able to trade with other people.
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16
Q

What was the significance of Chamberlain’s proposed imperial preference plan?

A
  • Insignificant as never passed.

- BUT would have been useful in the outbreak of WW1 when Britain’s dominions imposed tariffs against Britain.