The Chinese silver standard economy and the 1929 Great Depression
It is often argued that the silver standard insulated the Chinese economy from the Great Depression that prevailed in the gold standard countries during the period 1929-1935. Using econometric testing and counterfactual simulations, this article shows that if China had been on the gold standard (or on the gold-exchange standard), the balance of trade of this semiclosed economy would have been ameliorated, but the general price level would have declined significantly. Due to limited statistics, two important variables (GDP and industrial production) are not included in the analysis, but the general argument that the silver standard was a lifeboat to the Chinese economy remains defensible. Copyright Blackwell Publishing Asia Pty Ltd and the Economic History Society of Australia and New Zealand 2003.
Year of publication: |
2003
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Authors: | Lai, Cheng-chung ; Gau, Joshua Jr-Shiang |
Published in: |
Australian Economic History Review. - Economic History Society of Australia and New Zealand - EHSANZ. - Vol. 43.2003, 2, p. 155-168
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Publisher: |
Economic History Society of Australia and New Zealand - EHSANZ |
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