The Corn Laws, in force between 1815 and 1846, were import tariffs ostensibly designed to "protect" British farmers and landowners against competition from cheap foreign grain imports. These laws are often viewed as a cornerstone of British Mercantilism. According to Prof. David Cody *, they:
... were designed to protect English landholders by encouraging the export and limiting the import of corn when prices fell below a fixed point. They were eventually abolished in the face of militant agitation by the Anti-Corn Law League, formed in Manchester in 1839, which maintained that the laws, which amounted to a subsidy, increased industrial costs. After a lengthy campaign, opponents of the law finally got their way in 1846—a significant triumph which was indicative of the new political power of the English middle class.
Britain at the time was the most economically developed country in the world—there were no other rivals other than off-land British companies. The "protection" thus was used not against foreign imports, but against cheap rival British imports that would have severely cut into the profit margins of British landowners. The Corn Laws, in reality, represented the power of the British aristocracy, who were the landowners and therefore the crop producers. The repeal of the Corn Laws reduced not only the income generated by crops, but also the political power that land ownership had historically represented. The debate over the Corn Laws was a crossroads in the transition of Britain from a feudalist society, to a more modern, industrial one.
Note that in British English, the term "corn" means "grain" (the kernel), or specifically the primary grain crop of a country, which in England was wheat, not maize as implied by the North American usage of the term.
The debate, which made Disraeli's reputation, lasted until 16 May, 1846, when the bill to repeal passed by 98 votes. Some twelve days later it cleared the House of Lords thanks to the help of the Duke of Wellington. Embittered, Disraeli and Bentinck organized a combination of protectionists, Whigs, Radicals, and Irish members to defeat government's Irish Coercion Bill on 25 June. Peel resigned, the government fell, and the Conservative Party was split in half. Those who sided with Peel became known as Peelites, numbering among them almost every Conservative of ministerial experience (Gladstone, Lord Aberdeen, among others). They eventually combined with the Whigs and Radicals to form the modern Liberal party in the 1860s. Disraeli, along with Lord Stanley, fashioned the modern Conservative party from the remnants of Peel's Conservative Party.
The Economist was founded in September 1843 with help from the Anti-Corn Law League.
British laws | Economic history | 1815
Corn Laws | Graanwetten | Ustawy zbożowe | Хлебные законы | 穀物法 | 穀物法
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"Corn Laws".
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