The American Tax-Gatherers Will Not Like To Be
Cheated.
They will be very keen in searching for watches.
But who
can say whether they or the carriers of watches will have the best
of it in such a hunt. The tax-gatherers will be as hounds ever at
work on a cold scent. They will now be hot and angry, and then dull
and disheartened. But the carriers of watches who do not choose to
pay will generally, one may predict, be able to make their points
good.
With such a tax bill - which I believe came into action on the 1st of
May, 1862 - the Americans are not fairly open to the charge of being
unwilling to tax themselves. They have avoided none of the
irritating annoyances of taxation, as also they have not avoided, or
attempted to lighten for themselves, the dead weight of the burden.
The dead weight they are right to endure without flinching; but
their mode of laying it on their own backs justifies me, I think, in
saying that they do not yet know how to obtain access to their own
means. But this bill applies simply to matters of excise. As I
have said before, Congress, which has hitherto supported the
government by custom duties, has also the power of levying excise
duties, and now, in its first session since the commencement of the
war, has begun to use that power without much hesitation or
bashfulness. As regards their taxes levied at the custom-house, the
government of the United States has always been inclined to high
duties, with the view of protecting the internal trade and
manufactures of the country. The amount required for national
expenses was easily obtained; and these duties were not regulated,
as I think, so much with a view to the amount which might be
collected as to that of the effect which the tax might have in
fostering native industry. That, if I understand it, was the
meaning of Mr. Morrill's bill, which was passed immediately on the
secession of the Southern members of Congress, and which instantly
enhanced the price of all foreign manufactured goods in the States.
But now the desire for protection, simply as protection, has been
swallowed up in the acknowledged necessity for revenue; and the only
object to be recognized in the arrangement of the custom duties is
the collection of the greatest number of dollars. This is fair
enough. If the country can, at such a crisis, raise a better
revenue by claiming a shilling a pound on coffee than it can by
claiming sixpence, the shilling may be wisely claimed, even though
many may thus be prohibited from the use of coffee. But then comes
the great question, What duty will really give the greatest product?
At what rate shall we tax coffee so as to get at the people's money?
If it be so taxed that people won't use it, the tax cuts its own
throat. There is some point at which the tax will be most
productive; and also there is a point up to which the tax will not
operate to the serious injury of the trade.
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