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Colonial New Jersey's provincial fiscal structure, 1704–1775: spending obligations, revenue sources, and tax burdens during peace and war

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 June 2016

Farley Grubb*
Affiliation:
University of Delaware
*
F. Grubb, Professor and NBER Research Associate, Economics Department, University of Delaware, Newark, de 19716USA. Email: grubbf@udel.edu. Website: www.lerner.udel.edu/faculty-staff/farley-grubb .
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Abstract

I reconstitute the spending obligations and revenue sources of colonial New Jersey's provincial government for the years 1704 through 1775 from primary sources using forensic accounting techniques. I identify and analyze the methods for raising revenue to meet normal peacetime and emergency wartime expenses. I calculate the provincial tax burdens imposed on New Jersey's citizens. I identify how Britain interfered with New Jersey's fiscal structure. I estimate what the revenues and tax burdens would have been without this interference. New Jersey paid for war expenses by issuing bills of credit, spreading the tax burden of redeeming these bills into the future. New Jersey paid its yearly administrative costs with current property taxes and with current interest earnings from loaning paper money. In the absence of British interference and wars, New Jersey could have driven tax burdens to zero by using interest earnings to pay for all its provincial administrative costs.

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Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © European Association for Banking and Financial History e.V. 2016 
Figure 0

Table 1. Colonial New Jersey provincial ‘support of government’ itemized yearly expenses, 1709–75

Figure 1

Table 2. Budgetary categories and accounting conventions for colonial New Jersey's provincial government

Figure 2

Table 3. New Jersey provincial government spendable resources, 1704–75

Figure 3

Table 4. Interest income (spendable resource) from land-bank loans of paper money, 1704–75

Figure 4

Table 5. Specialty New Jersey provincial taxes used as revenue for the support of government

Figure 5

Figure 1. New Jersey Provincial revenue sources: tradeoffs between property tax revenues and interest income, 1704–75

Sources: Table 3; Grubb (2015).
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Table 6. New Jersey provincial taxes imposed on New Jersey citizens, 1704–75

Figure 7

Table 7. New Jersey provincial revenue and spending: war years versus peace years

Figure 8

Table 8. Average yearly New Jersey provincial tax burden per white capita (in Spanish silver dollars): war years versus peace years

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Figure 2. New Jersey provincial tax burden per white capita, 1705–75: actual versus counterfactual in Spanish silver dollars

Sources: See text; Table 8.