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A01="A City Editor"
A01=Alfred Mond
A01=Arthur Wadham
A01=Charles McLaren
A01=Elijah Helm
A01=Hugh Bell
A01=James Long
A01=M.P. Bart.
A01=S.G. Hobson
A01=Swire Smith
A01=Walter Runciman
A01=William Burton
Alfred Mond
Alkali Trade
Arthur Wadham
Author_"A City Editor"
Author_Alfred Mond
Author_Arthur Wadham
Author_Charles McLaren
Author_Elijah Helm
Author_Hugh Bell
Author_James Long
Author_M.P. Bart.
Author_S.G. Hobson
Author_Swire Smith
Author_Walter Runciman
Author_William Burton
Bleaching Powder
British Cotton Industry
British Hardware
British Wool Industries
Category=JP
Category=JPH
Charles Mclaren
Coal Trade
Colonial Preference
Common Carriers
Elijah Helm
Engineering Trades
English Chemical Industries
English Potter
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Foreign Seller
Government Issues
great Britain
Hardware Trade
Homeward Cargo
Hugh Bell
Iron Trade
James Long
Liberal party
Liberal Unionists
Lombard Street
Napoleon III
Net Tons
Pottery Trade
Preferential Tariff
Protectionism
Protectionist United States
S. G. Hobson
Staffordshire Potter
steel trades
Walter Runciman
William Burton
Wool Industry

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138602106
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 123 x 186mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Jul 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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First published in 1904, this volume emerged during a split within the Liberal Unionist Party over Joseph Chamberlain’s advocacy of Protectionism through Tariff Reform. Having originally broken with the Liberal Party over Home Rule in 1885, 1904 saw some Liberal Unionists return to the Liberal fold. The authors here constitute those departing Liberal Unionists in a multifaceted rallying call for Free Trade in the face of Protectionism. Their articles, on subjects such as Shipping, Agriculture and Engineering, assess the implications of Free Trade with a focus on each author’s specialist industry. The authors unanimously declare in favour of the system under which, they maintain, Great Britain developed unparalleled prosperity and taught other nations her industrial success. In the process, they demonstrate that trade cannot improve whilst fettered and focus on the potential for real improvements through Free Trade.

Swire Smith, Walter Runciman, Hugh Bell, S.G. Hobson, Arthur Wadhma, James Long, Elijah Helm, Charles McLaren, M. Bart

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