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2022 | Buch

Money and Government

A Study of China and Japan from a Historical Perspective

verfasst von: Prof. Qing-yuan Sui

Verlag: Springer Singapore

Buchreihe : SpringerBriefs in Economics

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Über dieses Buch

This is the first book to focus comparatively on the development processes of finance in China and Japan during the prewar period. The key issue is how to evaluate the role of government in the establishing of modern financial system. Both China and Japan started from a similar pre-modern situation in the middle of 19th century in that the monetary conditions were primitive and complicated, the traditional financial institutions were money-exchange-based, and above all, both countries had faced serious challenging pressure from the Western powers. International or domestic military affairs largely affected the development processes in both countries. While Japan succeeded in establishing its modern financial system that consistently supported its economic growth, China failed to modernize its money and banking system effectively at least until the end of World War II and the government had to change hands to the socialists, which further delayed the financial development. The experience of Japan suggests that the establishment of modern financial system may not simply be as a result of "spontaneous order", a concept used by Hayek, at least for the case of a catching-up country. The evolution process of money and banking in China shows that the role of government, especially its enforcement ability of and compliance to the rule of law may be more important than the "legal origins".

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. A Preliminary Introduction
Abstract
Money-using can solve market incompleteness. We sketch a rough image of money in premodern China and Japan, and introduce the main skein argument of the book. Comparision from a historical perspective could explain the role of money and the function of state.
Qing-yuan Sui
Chapter 2. Puzzles of the Monetary Regime in Premodern China
Abstract
I discuss three puzzles for the behaviors of government in maintaining monetary systems in premodern China: the asymmetric treatment of copper cash and silver bullion, the low extraction of seigniorage income in copper cash minting, and the high degree of cautiousness for issuing paper note. Some institutional factors are more important than the technological constraints in explaining these puzzles. I also suggest a principal-agent based model to explain the puzzles consistently.
Qing-yuan Sui
Chapter 3. The Divergence Between China and Japan
Abstract
In this chapter, I perform a qualitative and quantitative comparison of the monetary regime between China and Japan. Then, I ask and try to answer why the modernization of money succeeded in a relatively short period in Japan but not in China. The differences in motivations to reform monetary standard and state capacities to enforce the laws are crucial to explain the time gap of the emergence of monetary uniform between these two countries. The concept of spontaneous order is not helpful in explain this difference and is not appropriate for a catching-up country.
Qing-yuan Sui
Chapter 4. “The Worst Currency” or “The Best Arrangement”?
Abstract
The assessments of the monetary system in Qing period in China are divided. The changes in copper-silver price ratio were consistent with the prediction of OCA theory. But this is not enough to affirmatively evaluate the currency system. An appropriate evaluation should aim at improving market performance.
Qing-yuan Sui
Chapter 5. An Epilogue
Abstract
The two central concepts discussed in this book are money and government. While the answers in this book may be much less than what I have questioned, it is still helpful to discuss several issues that are of significance to the present and near future.
Qing-yuan Sui
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Money and Government
verfasst von
Prof. Qing-yuan Sui
Copyright-Jahr
2022
Verlag
Springer Singapore
Electronic ISBN
978-981-16-8874-4
Print ISBN
978-981-16-8873-7
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-8874-4

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