China and the end of global silver, 1873-1937

Author(s)

    • Dean, Austin

Bibliographic Information

China and the end of global silver, 1873-1937

Austin Dean

(Cornell studies in money)

Cornell University Press, 2020

  • : hardcover

Available at  / 7 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 227-240) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In the late nineteenth century, as much of the world adopted some variant of the gold standard, China remained the most populous country still using silver. Yet China had no unified national currency; there was not one monetary standard but many. Silver coins circulated alongside chunks of silver and every transaction became an "encounter of wits." China and the End of Global Silver, 1873–1937 focuses on how officials, policy makers, bankers, merchants, academics, and journalists in China and around the world answered a simple question: how should China change its monetary system? Far from a narrow, technical issue, Chinese monetary reform is a dramatic story full of political revolutions, economic depressions, chance, and contingency. As different governments in China attempted to create a unified monetary standard in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the United States, England, and Japan tried to shape the direction of Chinese monetary reform for their own benefit. Austin Dean argues convincingly that the Silver Era in world history ended owing to the interaction of imperial competition in East Asia and the state-building projects of different governments in China. When the Nationalist government of China went off the silver standard in 1935, it marked a key moment not just in Chinese history but in world history.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Following the Money 1. A Primer on the Qing Dynasty Monetary System 2. Silver Begins Its Fall: The Global Circulations of the U.S. Trade Dollar, 1873–1887 3. Provincial Silver Coins and the Fragmenting Chinese Monetary System, 1887–1900 4. The Gold-Exchange Standard and Imperial Competition in China, 1901–1905 5. Money and Power on the World's Last "Silver Frontier": The Currency Reform and Development Loan, 1910–1924 6. The Shanghai Mint and Establishing a Silver Standard in China, 1920–1933 7. The Fabi and the End of the Global Silver Era, 1933–1937 Conclusion: Reflections on the End of Global Silver

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