Title: Essential Question:
1- Essential Question
- What were the long-term problems with the
Articles of Confederation? - Reading Quiz Ch 7B (p.217-229)
2Examining the Articles of Confederation
3The Weaknesses of the Articles
- The Articles of Confederation served as the
framework for the U.S. govt from 1781 until
1789 - Early in the Confederation Period, the weakness
of the national govt was seen as good because
it eliminated tyranny - Later, these same weaknesses kept the govt from
solving serious national problems
4Economic Problems
- During the American Revolution, colonial boycotts
hurt trade - Everyone expected the economy to improve after
independence, but the Confederation Congress had
a difficult time - Paying off debt collecting taxes
- Halting inflation
- Generating a favorable balance of trade (foreign
domestic)
5Debt, Taxes, Inflation
The govt could request, but not require, states
to send money to Congress
- The U.S. was burdened with 40 million in war
debt in 1783 - The Confederate Congress could not ease the
national debt because it had no power to tax - Congress printed 200 million in new currency to
pay off debt but this led to massive inflation - Creditors demanded repayment of debts at market
value
6Trade Problems under the Articles
Connecticut levied heavier duties on
Massachusetts goods than on British goods
- Congress was unable to create a favorable balance
of trade - To raise revenue, states created tariffs on goods
from other states - The lack of hard currency made trade difficult
- Desire for cheap British goods hurt infant
American industries - England prohibited its Caribbean colonies from
trading with USA
This especially hurt Southern planters
This especially hurt the North
7U.S. Trade with Britain, 1783-1789
Debt
8Economic Problems
Washington kept generals from overthrowing the
new government "Gentlemen, you will permit me to
put on my spectacles, for I have not only grown
gray but almost blind in the service of my
country."
- The economic stagnation of the Confederation era
led to uprisings - The lack of tax revenue failure of the govt to
pay soldiers sparked a military coup in 1783
called the Newburgh Conspiracy - Property foreclosures led to desperation
uprising farmers in 1787 called Shays Rebellion
Shays Rebellion proved to be the convincing
event that led to the Constitutional Convention
of 1787
9Shays Rebellion in Western Massachusetts
- Poor farmers in western MA were angered over high
taxes prospect of debtors jail - Daniel Shays led an uprising closed debt courts
threatened a federal arsenal
10Economic Problems
- Nationalists called for a stronger central
govt a constitutional amendment to allow
create a 5 import tax a national bank - 12 states agreed, but a group of Rhode Island
Localists refused killed the amendment - The failure to reform the Articles led
Nationalists to consider the Articles hopelessly
defective
Led by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison,
Robert Morris
A national debt if not excessive, will be a
national blessingHamilton
11Foreign Policy Problems
Congress the army were too weak to resist
- The Articles proved inadequate to handle
interstate foreign affairs - When Americans did not repay legitimate war
debts, Britain kept troops in the Ohio Valley - Spain refused to recognize the southern U.S.
border closed access to the Mississippi River - Algerian pirates attacked enslaved American
merchants - States argued over river rights
John Jays Jay-Gardoqui Treaty was met with
regional resistance was rejected in Congress
12The USA in the Confederate Era
13Have We Fought for This?
- Have we fought for this? Was it with these
expectations that we launched into a sea of
trouble? - George Washington, 1785