Tuesday, May 28, 2019
Justification of the Corn Laws Essay -- Politics History Political
Justification of the  lemon yellow Laws   The Corn Law was a potentially  heavy bill introduced in 1815 after   three years of good harvests. It was instigated with the support of   Lord Liverpool the current Prime Minister who saw the Corn Laws as a   temporary measure to create stability in the agricultural sector in   the immediate post-war years. The Corn Laws were potentially   disastrous because they, along with the abolishment of Income  taxation and   the creation of the Game laws, were seen as a return by the   ultra-Torys to a single-issue, single class government. That issue   being the wants and needs of the landed classes. I  moot   that the Corn Laws led large groups of the urbanised population   to become unreasonably politicised in their demands to parliament.    The catalyst for these potentially revolutionary actions being the   starvation of the working classes - the Corn Laws.   Lord Liverpools justification for the Corn Laws was the appalling   state of agricultu   re in England in the post war period. England faced   a unique set of  pecuniary and economic problems bought about by the   end of the war. The harvest of 1813, 14 and 15 were extremely good   leading to a fall in prices by  about half. The end of trade sanctions   after the end of the Napoleonic Wars flooded the British market with   cheaper corn that made British Corn uncompetitive. Agriculture still   exceeded manufacturing as the countrys largest single economic   interest. Therefore the Corn Laws were justifiable in this sense   because they still supported the largest single category of labour   provider. But while choosing to  safe(p) one social group Liverpool and   his cabinet had provided immedia...  ...for a slim chance of economic recovery in a single sector of   the countrys economy-agriculture. The British  political sympathies had decided   to choke one group of citizens, the urban based working classes, to   create a wealthier group of large land owners-ironically t   he largest   group of MPs. In my eye protecting no part of the economy would have   been the best idea. No economic area would flourish but neither would   any industry be choked. A free market mentality would be painful but   would result in more efficient techniques in manufacturing and   agriculture. All the Corn Laws seemed to do was  beneathline the   injustices that were allowed to happen because of the lack of   universal suffrage. It also highlighted how inward looking and self   centred the Ultra-Torys were as well as highlighting urban electoral   under representation.                  
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