"Of all the American Plantations, his Majesty has none so great, or so populous, that brings in so little profit to the Crown... as New England... The people of New England are a very industrious and ingenious people... but their industry lies in the same things as the industry of England, namely, in shipping, fishery, and tillage... so that they are rather a competitor than a helper to us."
— Sir Josiah Child, A New Discourse of Trade, 1693
Which of the following historical developments during the late seventeenth century best explains the concerns expressed in the excerpt?
- The expansion of colonial shipping and merchant networks that competed with English tradeCevap
- BThe establishment of a plantation-based economy in New England that relied on cash crops for export
- CA widespread shift in New England from chattel slavery to indentured servitude to meet manufacturing demands
- DThe adoption of free-trade policies by the British Crown to encourage economic independence in the colonies
Cevap
The expansion of colonial shipping and merchant networks that competed with English trade
The correct answer is correct because New England's economy was diversified and included shipping, shipbuilding, and fishing. These industries directly competed with those of England, running counter to the mercantilist goal where colonies were supposed to provide raw materials and purchase manufactured goods from the mother country rather than acting as economic competitors.
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Anahtar Kavram
The economic divergence of the New England colonies and the conflict it created within the British mercantilist system.
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