"Our plantations... are a double advantage to us; first, in that they take off our manufactures, and next, in that they supply us with such commodities as we must otherwise purchase from other nations... But this advantage is only so long as we keep them dependent on their mother country, and do not permit them to set up manufactures of their own, nor to trade directly with foreign states, which would make them our rivals."
— John Cary, English merchant, *An Essay on the State of England, Relation to its Trade*, 1695
Based on the excerpt, which of the following best explains how British colonists in North America responded to the trade restrictions described by Cary?
- Colonial merchants frequently participated in smuggling and illicit trade with other European empires.Cevap
- BColonial governments successfully petitioned the Crown to establish a system of free trade across the Atlantic.
- CSouthern tobacco planters diversified their economies by establishing large-scale shipping and textile manufacturing.
- DColonial merchants replaced chattel slavery with short-term indentured servitude to reduce transport costs.
Cevap
Colonial merchants frequently participated in smuggling and illicit trade with other European empires.
The correct answer is correct because British colonists, particularly merchants in New England, routinely bypassed the Navigation Acts and other mercantilist restrictions by smuggling goods such as molasses, sugar, and manufactured goods to and from French, Dutch, and Spanish ports. This illicit trade allowed colonists to maintain high profits despite metropolitan efforts to monopolize colonial trade.
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Transatlantic Trade and Mercantilism