- home
- facet
- Smoot-Hawley Act
Smoot-Hawley Act
ai generated text
The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act was a protectionist trade policy implemented in the United States in 1930, raising US tariffs on over 20,000 imported goods and prompting retaliatory tariffs from other countries. The law, signed by President Herbert Hoover, was sponsored by Senator Reed Smoot and Representative Willis C. Hawley, and economists and economic historians have agreed that it worsened the effects of the Great Depression, which saw American exports and imports reduce by 67%. The act's passage was a response to concerns about job protection and farmer welfare, despite the US having a trade account surplus and rising manufactured exports at the time.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.US-China Relations
- 2.Chinese Foreign Policy
- 3.Immigration to the US
- 4.Canada under Justin Trudeau
- 5.Mexico under Claudia Sheinbaum
- 6.Canada under Mark Carney
- 7.United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement
- 8.World Economy
- 9.Steel industry
- 10.Mining industry
- 11.Trade Agreement
- 12.Inflation
countries
- 1.Korea, Republic of
- 2.Japan
- 3.United States
- 4.Taiwan, Province of China
- 5.Australia
- 6.China
- 7.Mexico
- 8.Viet Nam
- 9.Canada
- 10.Germany
- 11.Spain
- 12.France
organizations
- 1.European Union
- 2.YouTube
- 3.White House
- 4.Nasdaq
- 5.KPMG
- 6.Dow Jones
- 7.Cornell University
- 8.Center for Strategic and International Studies
- 9.World Trade Organization
- 10.United Nations
- 11.State Council Tariff Commission
- 12.SPI Asset Management
persons
- 1.Donald Trump
- 2.Rebeca Grynspan
- 3.Mao Zedong
- 4.Howard Lutnick
- 5.Xi Jinping
- 6.Shi Yinhong
- 7.Shigeru Ishiba
- 8.Pedro Sánchez
- 9.Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
- 10.Mark Williams
- 11.Mark Carney
- 12.Mao Ning