Alexander Hamilton's Financial Plan

Essay by shellybee610High School, 12th gradeA+, February 2003

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After the Revolutionary War, the United States was left with a $52 million dollar national debt as well as a $25 million dollar debt from the individual states. Alexander Hamilton developed a financial plan to

re establish the credit of the US by providing for the payment of the nation's debts.

Hamilton established the credit of the United States by paying off the national debt. One way he did this was by exchanging old war bonds for new Federal Reserve bonds. In the eyes of other countries, this proved that the United States was responsibly paying off its debts. This allowed the US to borrow money, and establish good credit once again. Good credit was extremely important to the United States because it was the basis for foreign trade, and was necessary for growth of the economy. Without good credit, the US could not borrow money, would not be able to fund businesses, and would not be able to keep a stable economy.

Answer A is the correct choice because the main point of Hamilton's financial plan was to pay off the national debt in order to restore the nation's credit.

Another way Hamilton proposed to pay the nation's debts was to raise money through taxing. His plan increased taxes on imported goods, as well as placed a tax on items such as whiskey. This raise in taxes not only affected the rich but the poor as well because the tax related to a variety of items. As a result of the tax on whiskey, a group of poor farmers in Western Pennsylvania rebelled, resulting in the Whiskey Rebellion. Answer B is incorrect because the taxes placed by Hamilton's plan affected not only those most able to pay, but the average citizen as well.

One part of Hamilton's plan that...