Walker Tariff
The
1846
Walker tariff
was a
Democrat
-passed bill that reversed the high rates of
tariffs
imposed by the
Whig
-backed "
Black Tariff
" of
1842
under president
John Tyler
. The act is named after
Robert J. Walker
, who was formerly a Democratic
Senator
from
Mississippi
and served as
Secretary of the Treasury
under president
James K. Polk
. The bill resulted in a moderate reduction in many tariff rates and was considered a success in that it stimulated trade and brought needed revenue into the U.S. Treasury. The 1846 tariff rates initiated a fourteen year period of relative
free trade
by nineteenth century standards lasting until 1860. It was passed along with a series of financial reforms proposed by Walker including the
Warehousing Act
of
1846
. The Walker Tariff remained in effect until the
Tariff of 1857
, which reduced rates further. Both were reversed in
1861
with the adoption of the
Republican
-backed
Morrill Tariff
and the return of
protectionism
.
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