Gil Hahn

70%
Flag icon
And therein lies the solution to the riddle: during the nineteenth century, trade within a nation was much more important than trade with other countries. As long as a country’s internal markets were open, a tariff wall against foreign goods did relatively little damage. Before the twentieth century, external trade constituted only a tiny part of the economy of most nations. For example, in 1870 exports constituted just 2.5 percent of GDP in
A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped the World
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview