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Tariffs and the textile trade between Brazil and Britain (1808-1860)* * I am grateful to André Villela, Rafael Cariello, Thomas Kang, Kara Dimitruk, and the participants in the Latin American History Seminar of the Institute of Historical Research (University of London) for the helpful comments. This research received financial support from the British Academy Newton Mobility Grant, Application NMG2R2\100176. All remaining errors are mine.

Abstract

The commercial treaty with Britain in 1810, along the authorization of foreign trade in ports in 1808, are among the most important institutional changes in nineteenth century Brazil. The 1810 treaty lowered tariffs for British manufactures while maintaining high tariffs in Britain for Brazilian sugar and coffee. These terms are generally viewed as disastrous for the Brazilian economy, although there is still limited quantitative information about how much the tariff affected the demand for British imports. This paper provides new qualitative and quantitative evidence on the operation and effect of Brazil’s imports tariffs in the period. I find that the effect of the tariffs is different from what traditional literature assumes. First, the monetary instability in the 1820s and conflicts over product price assessment often led the de facto tariff to be higher than the 15 percent established by the treaty. Second, even with higher rates, quantitative analysis shows they did not have decrease imports of British textiles.

Keywords:
Import tariff; Commercial treaty; British textiles; Brazil

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