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What is an example of an external tax?

External taxes are taxes more oriented toward tariffs and export/import taxes levied against goods being shipping in (and out) of the nation. These taxes were limited in scope: they tended to take effect only in shipping towns, and only a select group of people, notably merchants, needed to pay them.

How did American colonists distinguish between internal and external taxes according to Benjamin Franklin?

Franklin, you say the colonies have always submitted to external taxes, and object to the right of Parliament only in laying internal taxes. The Stamp Act imposed internal taxes, whereas import duties were external taxes. According to Franklin, Americans opposed internal but not external taxes.

Was the Sugar Act an internal tax?

Commentary. Unlike the Sugar Act, which was an external tax (i.e. it taxed only goods imported into the colonies), the Stamp Act was an internal tax, levied directly upon the property and goods of the colonists. Internal taxes had far wider effects.

What is salutary neglect?

Salutary neglect was Britain’s unofficial policy, initiated by prime minister Robert Walpole, to relax the enforcement of strict regulations, particularly trade laws, imposed on the American colonies late in the seventeenth and early in the eighteenth centuries.

How does Franklin explain America’s rejection of the Stamp Act?

1. Franklin said the colonists were already heavily taxed and many of them did not have the money to pay the new stamp taxes. He also said that the colonists considered the taxes to be unjust since America was not represented in Parliament.

Who did Franklin talk to about repealing the Stamp Act?

Benjamin Franklin
Franklin answered 174 questions, provided testimony to help British lawmakers understand the colonists’ resistance to British policies and argued for the repeal of the Stamp Act. In January 1766, Benjamin Franklin appears before the House of Commons to advocate for a repeal of the Stamp Act of 1765.

Did Ben Franklin support the Stamp Act?

Benjamin Franklin, Pennsylvania agent and deputy postmaster general in North America, initially supported the Stamp Act of 1765, by which Parliament levied a new tax on British colonies. Franklin became an opponent when he learned of the fervent colonial opposition.