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"Damn it! How did I forget about this!"

After reading the newspaper, Jero Bonaparte gently patted his forehead and muttered softly.

A few years ago, he was always thinking about the outbreak of an economic crisis in the United States of Arica.

To trigger an economic crisis in the United States of Arica as quickly as possible, he was involved in mining, real estate speculation, and even collaborated with Britain to short California gold on the international market.

Who would have thought that the resilience of the United States would be far more enduring than he had imagined. In the ti fra Jero Bonaparte expected (according to his prediction, the United States of Arica should have triggered an economic crisis by late 1855 or early 1856), the crisis did not occur.

With a slight sense of disappointnt, Jero Bonaparte’s attention to the United States also began to wane, compounded by the fact that he was occupied with nurous other political affairs at the ti.

Over ti, he gradually forgot about the economic crisis in the United States of Arica.

It wasn’t until today, when the secretariat delivered the newspaper to him, that he rembered the economic crisis of the United States of Arica.

However, what he did not expect was that the economic crisis in the United States of Arica had nonetheless proceeded along the historical trajectory.

He was unclear whether it was a correction of history or due to the intrinsic reasons within the United States of Arica.

"Let think, what was the reason the United States of Arica developed an economic crisis?" Jero Bonaparte muttered to himself, "I rember it was sothing to do with the railroad boom, right?"

To verify the guess in his mind, Jero Bonaparte got up from the sofa and went to the desk, opened the bottom drawer, and took out a notebook to browse through.

"Economic crisis... economic crisis!" Jero Bonaparte mumbled softly as he flipped backward page after page.

Soon, Jero Bonaparte found the page he wanted.

"That’s right! This is it!" Looking at the content in the notebook, a smile appeared at the corner of Jero Bonaparte’s mouth, and then he sighed to himself, "My mory is really good!"

According to the content recorded in the notebook, a large-scale economic crisis would start this autumn in Arica and then spread throughout the world.

(In reality, only Europe, Arica, and South Arica were affected by the economic crisis, with under-industrialized regions basically not experiencing much impact during this economic crisis.)

The reason for the economic crisis is due to the unrestrained developnt of the railroad industry in the United States of Arica.

Under the rough railroad planning of the United States of Arica, the nation built 33,000 kiloters of railroads in just 10 years, exceeding the combined total of the Kingdom of Britain and the French Empire (8,000 kiloters in Britain and 12,000 kiloters in France).

In this distorted developnt, the railroad bubble in the United States of Arica grew increasingly large.

If the United States of Arica had constructed the railroads using its own resources, then it would not have caused a significant impact on the world economy, and the damage would not have spread worldwide.

However, the United States of Arica did not build such long railroads by its own strength. The rails, ties, and steel plates used for construction were not produced in the United States but originated from the Kingdom of Britain.

Arican steel enterprises not only failed to reap benefits from railroad construction but instead retreated under the continuous onslaught of cheap British steel.

Many steel enterprises were on the verge of bankruptcy under the pressure of low-cost British steel.

For a sovereign nation, it is unimaginable for dostic companies to be unable to win against foreign enterprises in their own land, instead being pushed to the brink of bankruptcy by them.

The predicant faced by Arican steel enterprises was due to their low tariff policy, under which the Kingdom of Britain, with its mature steelmaking and tallurgy technology, crushed the newly developing steel technology in the United States of Arica.

Even if both sides were at the sa technological level, British steel enterprises, with their excellent workers, could vastly reduce their costs compared to the United States of Arica.

Under this first-mover advantage, for later developing countries to make progress, they have to raise tariffs. Once excellent products from first-mover nations enter their markets, they soon lose their advantage.

Dostic companies can use this buffer period for developnt.

After the enterprises have developed to a certain scale, they can then moderately lower tariffs to apply pressure on dostic businesses, which in turn promotes further advancent.

However, such thods only exist in a sovereign state with relatively centralized power.

For the current United States of Arica, it is entirely unsuitable.

The federal governnt’s powers in today’s United States of Arica are much smaller compared to even before the Civil War, let alone compared to the United States of Arica after World War II.

The present United States of Arica is more like a country where power is only slightly more centralized than a confederation, rather than a truly federal country.

Speaking of which, one must ntion the history of the United States of Arica.

The federal governnt of the United States of Arica was originally established based on the Thirteen States willingly ceding authority to the federal governnt under the pressure from Britain, allowing it to be smoothly constructed.

In essence, the founding of the United States of Arica was rely thirteen local lords unable to defeat the "son of heaven" from Europe, thus forced to band together for warmth.

It wasn’t like France, where through force of arms from a small area around the Paris Basin, it fought all the other lords of France, becoming the preeminent local power throughout the whole of France.

Thus, in the Constitution of the United States of Arica, each state possesses the autonomy to withdraw from the United States of Arica.

During this period, the power of the state governnts was equivalent to that of a small country.

State governnts held all rights except for foreign relations, minting currency, and maintaining an army.

(State governnts rely lacked the authority to establish field armies; national guards and private armies were still common in the United States of Arica. Besides, the regular army of the United States of Arica at that ti numbered only tens of thousands.)

The current federal governnt, rather than being a central governnt, was more of a political consultation platform for state governnts.

The inability to implent high tariffs in the federal governnt was due to differences between the southern and northern states on the issue of tariffs.

For the northern industrialists, raising tariffs could effectively protect their factory interests, and they wholeheartedly supported it.

However, for the southern slave owners, raising tariffs was absolutely unacceptable.

Once the United States of Arica raises tariffs, the Kingdom of Britain will correspondingly increase tariffs on the United States of Arica as well.

In this scenario, the cotton in the hands of the slave owners would suffer economic losses due to the raised tariffs of the Kingdom of Britain.

It must be noted that the Kingdom of Britain is the only country in the world capable of consuming the cotton share of the United States of Arica.

The actions to raise tariffs by northern industrialists were essentially a death sentence for them.

Needless to say, the profit margin from industrial capital was much greater than that from agricultural capital.

In the long run, southern slave owners would only be overtaken by northern industrialists.

When the interests of southern slave owners and northern industrialists were completely at odds, the only thing the federal governnt could do was try to reconcile the issues between the two sides and propose conditions they could both accept.

However, getting southern slave owners to compromise was not that easy. When the federal governnt attempted to offset the losses from raised tariffs for southern slave owners by subsidizing agriculture, hoping to gain the agreent of southern slave owners for raising tariffs,

those representatives of southern slave owners pointed to high-end goods from Britain and France on their persons and asked representatives of northern industry if they could produce similar products in a short ti fra.

The representatives of the Northern Industry, who were just getting started in the industrial and textile sectors, could only shake their heads and accuse the southern slave representatives of making unreasonable demands.

Subsequently, during the vote, the representatives of the southern slave owners would use their veto power to reject the proposal.

For southern slave owners, the fate of northern industrialists was not their concern.

Again and again, under repeated vetoes, the proposal to raise tariffs never went through.

The United States of Arica had no choice but to build a 33,000-kiloter railway with the "benevolent" "assistance" of the Kingdom of Britain.

Capital from the Kingdom of Britain gradually took full control of the United States of Arica’s steel sector, and after establishing a foothold in the steel sector, British capital extended its reach into the banking sector.

In the United States of Arica, the vast majority of thousands of banks had British capital involvent.

The current United States of Arica could be said to be half controlled by British capital.

The Kingdom of Britain is now the only creditor of the United States of Arica.

Of course, this control did not make the United States of Arica a puppet of the Kingdom of Britain; at most, it prevented the complete and absolute breakdown between the two.

However, British capital probably did not anticipate that the United States of Arica would experience a steel bubble similar to the one it once did, a bubble even larger than that of the Kingdom of Britain.

"The crisis will occur in the fall of 1857, over 5,000 enterprises will go bankrupt..." Jero Bonaparte read each word of what he had written before.

His previous self had specifically gathered information to debate with others, little did he know that it would beco invaluable in this life, "With funding from the UK, Arican banks, railways, and comrcial companies went bankrupt one after another, British investors saw their securities sharply devalued..."

Once Jero Bonaparte finished reading everything, he placed the notebook back in the drawer and walked out of the study, standing on the platform with Bashirio, commanding Bashirio to summon the Minister of Finance, Adolf Fuld.

Bashirio, following Jero Bonaparte’s orders, went to the Ministry of Finance to find Adolf Fuld.

An hour or so later, Adolf Fuld was brought to Jero Bonaparte’s study by Bashirio.

"Your Majesty, do you have any instructions?" Adolf Fuld inquired respectfully to Jero Bonaparte.

"Fuld, co over here!" Jero Bonaparte gestured for Adolf Fuld to sit on the sofa, then handed him a newspaper.

Adolf Fuld looked at Jero Bonaparte with confusion, not understanding what the Emperor wanted him to do.

"Mr. Fuld, read the newspaper first! I have so questions I’d like to ask you in a while!"

You are reading Make France Great Again Chapter 927 - 918: North–South Conflict Amid Economic Crisis on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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