马来亚殖民地的税收政策和土地改革

A. Ganiyev
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在18 -19世纪期间,英国的影响开始改变整个马来亚的经济和社会状况。锡矿开采的进一步扩大是一个转折点,影响了整个社会。英国在槟城、马六甲和新加坡的海峡殖民地建立于1786年至1825年之间,由东印度公司统治。锡业向个人开放。进一步的发展需要更多的劳动力和资金的参与,因此,中国人来到了中心舞台,并开始大量投资于成义乌宗和森美兰州的锡矿开采行业。本文讨论了殖民时期马来亚税制和土地问题的改革。本研究以图书馆为基础,调查了殖民时期的税收和土地问题。改革发生在19世纪最后20年的土地关系中,帮助重塑了前殖民时期存在的自给自足的农业,使其成为更先进和系统化的出口导向型收入来源。在19世纪的最后25年,可出口作物的产量有了巨大的增长。发生在20世纪20年代的橡胶萧条给了棕榈油成为成功农产品的机会。肯尼迪说,许多种植园面积都很大;到1933年,共有32个庄园,种植面积达6.4万英亩,到1941年,种植面积已增至7.9万英亩。当局为了鼓励棕榈油的生产并使经济多样化,以优惠条件授予土地。本研究发现,在殖民统治末期,英国人开始使用有利于土地所有者提高产量的条款。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
TAXATION POLICY AND LAND REFORMS IN COLONIAL MALAYA
During the 18th-19th centuries, British influence started to change the situation of the economy and the society of Malaya as a whole. Steps towards the further expansion of the tin mining industry was a turning point, which affected the whole society. The British Straits Settlements of Penang, Malacca, and Singapore were established between 1786 and 1825 and were governed by the East India Company. The tin trade was thrown open to private individuals. Further developments required more labor and funds involvement and as a result, the Chinese came to the central scene and started to invest hugely in Sungei Ujong and Negeri Sembilan’s tin mining industry. This article discusses the colonial time reforms regarding Malaya’s taxation and land matters. Using library-based research, this study investigated colonial taxation and land issues. Reforms, which occurred in the last two decades of the 19th century in land relations, helped to reshape existed in pre-colonial period subsistent agriculture to the more advanced and systematized export-based income generator to the British. In the last quarter of the 19th century, there was a huge increase in exportable crop production. The rubber depression, which occurred in the 1920s, gave chance for palm oil to become successful agricultural produce. Kennedy states that many of the plantation areas were large ones; by 1933, there were 32 estates with 64,000-planted acres, and this acreage had increased to 79,000 by 1941. Authorities, in order to encourage the production of palm oil and diversify the economy, granted lands on favorable terms. This research fnds that at the end of the colonial rule the British started to use the benefcial terms for the landowners to boost production.
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