Why Is “Red Tape” Associated With Bureaucracy?

History Facts

The English word “bureaucracy” originated in the early 19th century, referring to an administrative system where decisions were made by a group of nonelected officials. Today, the term can refer to the regulatory system of any public or private institution, including corporations, organizations, and governments. And in a society where laws are upheld based on a set of established standards and practices, keeping everything running smoothly can require an almost mind-boggling array of rules and regulations. 

Such an excessive amount of official systems and processes is often referred to as “red tape.” But how and when exactly did that colorful term become associated with bureaucracy? 

Credit: andrew payne / Alamy Stock Photo 

Red Tape Was Used To Bind Official Documents

The use of red tape to bind documents has been noted for centuries, but its exact origins remain murky. The practice may date as far back as the 11th century, to the red, ribbonlike cloth that English clerks used to secure official documents. For hundreds of years, correspondence was tied with tape and the ends were sealed with melted wax, so that the contents couldn’t be read by anyone other than the intended recipient. The only way to access the documents was to cut the seal, which around the 18th century led to the common idiom “cutting through the red tape.” 

Some historians suggest the use of red tape for binding government records may have started later, during King Charles V’s reign over Spain in the 16th century, when important documents were secured with red tape to distinguish them from other papers. The color red has long signified royalty and wealth, and red dyes such as kermes and cochineal produced a deep scarlet that were favored by the rich and powerful. Considering the high cost these dyes at the time, it’s unlikely that red ribbon was used for anything other than the most important official documents, at least initially.

Although red tape bindings had already been around for some time, the first written reference in English to the words “red tape” appeared in 1658, in an advertisement in the Publick Intelligencer describing a lost “little bundle of Papers tied with a red Tape.” By the end of the 17th century, the tradition of using red tape to secure official documents had crossed the Atlantic and become standard practice in the American colonies as well. In 1696, a law was passed that stated records of public land boundaries in the colony of Maryland were required to be “seal’d with his Excellency’s Seal of Arms, on a Red Cross with Red Tape.” Other important government documents, including the Stamp Act of 1765, were also secured with red tape.

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