Trade effects of silver price fluctuations in 19th-century China: A macro approach

被引:5
作者
El-Shagi, Makram [1 ,2 ]
Zhang, Lin [1 ]
机构
[1] Henan Univ, Ctr Financial Dev & Stabil, Kaifeng, Peoples R China
[2] Halle Inst Econ Res, Halle, Germany
关键词
China; SVAR; Small sample; Silver price; EXCHANGE-RATE MOVEMENTS; VECTOR AUTOREGRESSIONS; ECONOMIC-DEVELOPMENT; MONETARY-SYSTEM; GOLD STANDARD;
D O I
10.1016/j.chieco.2020.101522
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
We assess the role of silver price fluctuations in Chinese trade and GDP during the late Qing dynasty, when China still had a bimetallic (silver/copper) monetary system, in which silver was mostly used for international trade. Using a structural VAR (SVAR) with blockwise recursive identification, we identify the impact of silver price shocks on the Chinese economy from 1867, when trade data became available, to 1910, one year before the Qing dynasty collapsed. We find that silver price shocks had a sizable impact on both imports and exports but only a very minor effect on the trade balance, only a marginal impact on growth, and almost no effect on domestic prices. Stronger effects were partly mitigated by inelastic export quantities. Generally, the effect of silver price shocks, while considerable, was only short-lived, displaying no persistence in either direction. We find that the bimetallic system in Qing China might have mitigated a potential positive effect of silver depreciation but did not reverse the effect, which - contrary to claims made in the previous literature - was responsible for neither the worsening trade balance nor the inflation and the quickly increasing imports that occurred during our sample period.
引用
收藏
页数:28
相关论文
共 54 条
[1]   Wages, prices, and living standards in China, 1738-1925: in comparison with Europe, Japan, and India [J].
Allen, Robert C. ;
Bassino, Jean-Pascal ;
Ma, Debin ;
Moll-Murata, Christine ;
van Zanden, Jan Luiten .
ECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW, 2011, 64 :8-38
[2]   TRANSITION FROM INDIAN TO BRITISH INDIAN SYSTEMS OF MONEY AND BANKING 1800-1850 [J].
BAGCHI, AK .
MODERN ASIAN STUDIES, 1985, 19 (JUL) :501-519
[3]   How important was silver? Some evidence on exchange rate fluctuations and stock returns in Colonial-Era Asia [J].
Bailey, W ;
Bhaopichitr, K .
JOURNAL OF BUSINESS, 2004, 77 (01) :137-173
[4]   Correcting Estimation Bias in Dynamic Term Structure Models [J].
Bauer, Michael D. ;
Rudebusch, Glenn D. ;
Wu, Jing Cynthia .
JOURNAL OF BUSINESS & ECONOMIC STATISTICS, 2012, 30 (03) :454-467
[5]   Winners and losers in the commodity lottery: The impact of terms of trade growth and volatility in the Periphery 1870-1939 [J].
Blattman, Christopher ;
Hwang, Jason ;
Williamson, Jeffrey G. .
JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2007, 82 (01) :156-179
[6]   INTERPRETING NEW EVIDENCE ABOUT CHINA AND UNITED-STATES SILVER PURCHASES [J].
BRANDT, L ;
SARGENT, TJ .
JOURNAL OF MONETARY ECONOMICS, 1989, 23 (01) :31-51
[7]  
Broadberry S., 2017, TECHNICAL REPORT
[8]  
Chen Chau-Nan., 1975, J MONEY CREDIT BANK, V7, P359
[9]   Banking and Finance in China [J].
Chen, Henry C. .
JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC HISTORY, 1943, 3 (02) :227-229
[10]  
Christiano LJ, 1999, HBK ECON, V15, P65