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Chinese hyperinflation

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The Chinese hyperinflation was the hyperinflation in the Republic of China that lasted between 1935 and 1950. Since the Nationalist government effectively eliminated free banking in 1935, it gained a monopoly on the Chinese currency, as a result of the impact of the United States Silver Purchase act on China.[1] However, the Nationalist government was dependent on financial deficits, leading to depreciation of the currency, a situation that was exacerbated by the Second Sino-Japanese War and the Chinese civil war.[2]

The hyperinflation eroded popular support for Nationalists, contributing to the collapse of the Republic of China Government on Mainland China,[3] as it destroyed the wealth of the middle class and impoverished a number of rural Chinese. To control the price hike, the government imposed price hike ban and wage control, which turned out a failure.[4]

Origins

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In 1905, the Imperial Chinese government founded the Hubu Bank, granting it the authority to issue banknotes. At the time, Chinese leaders, whether conservative or revolutionary, believed that increasing the issuance of banknotes would allow them to outspend their revenues. Although subsequent republican governments sought to unify the national currency, progress was slow by 1937 due to internal conflicts and concerns about foreign intervention, as the plan potentially required substantial foreign loans. As a result, silver bullion dominated the market, circulated and exchanged in various forms and weights without fixed ratios.[5]

The rising global silver prices in the early 1930s, primarily due to the silver purchase policies in the West, led to significant deflation in China, which discouraged Chinese exports and resulting in continuous foreign trade deficit. Cheap agricultural produces flooded into China while silver flowed out. In 1935, the Nationalist government reformed the Chinese currency to replace the silver standard with the foreign exchange standard. It pledged to establish an independent Central Bank to act as the reserve bank and to create a supervisory committee with responsible members from the business community to oversee the money supply. However, none of these promises was fulfilled. Instead it paved ways for the government to expand money supply without constraints.[5]

Second Sino-Japanese War

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Free China

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The Hump was the only route of imports for China in 1942-1944

Starting in July 1937, the Japanese military advanced through northern and eastern China, forcing the Chinese government to retreat inland and abandon significant manufacturing and agricultural regions, as well as key transport hubs vital for imports and exports. This retreat, combined with Japanese blockades of Chinese transport routes, led to immediate price surges in Free China. Each successive Japanese victory exacerbated the situation. For instance, the fall of Wuhan and Guangzhou in late 1938 caused import prices to rise by 72%. Similarly, the Japanese invasion of Guangxi in late 1939 nearly doubled import prices in Chongqing. In contrast, locally produced goods, including food and agricultural raw materials, maintained stable prices until 1938, supported by a robust harvest in Sichuan that year. However, from 1939 onwards, the prices of both imported and local goods began to rise in tandem as around five million refugees moved westward into Free China.[6] Furthermore, since 1939, the Imperial Japanese Army's Noborito Research Institute counterfeited some 4 billion yuan to support Japan's war efforts.[7]

Since the start of the war, the Chinese government began funding its efforts through the issuance of war bonds, which initially enjoyed strong public support. By late 1938, government spending expanded not only for the war effort but also for reconstruction and the development of inland industries and transport infrastructure. This expansion aimed to reinforce infrastructure and sustain the war effort within the remaining Chinese-controlled territories. Consequently, government spending increased by 33%, despite the administration now managing only about half of the country. However, public confidence in war bonds waned by late 1938, leading to a decline in bond sales. Additionally, the limited new taxes introduced up to late 1939 failed to offset the government's excessive spending. As a result, the budget deficit continued to grow unchecked.[6]

After the Pearl Harbour attack in 1941, Japan quickly seized the whole of Shanghai and, in 1942, cut off the Burma Road, a crucial supply route for China. This led to a 50% decrease in imports in 1942 compared to the previous year. Despite efforts to compensate with The Hump air transport route over the Himalayas, by 1944, China was only receiving 6% of the total imports it had in 1937. Additionally, rice production in southern China faced unfavourable outcomes, although wheat and barley production in Henan and Hebei saw slight increases. Due to administrative failures, the Nationalist government struggled to enforce price control measures, despite issuing decrees to this effect. None of the government’s strategies addressed the need to curb its own budget deficit, which continued to generate inflation.[8]

Chinese Civil War

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References

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  1. ^ Habegger, Jay (1988-09-01). "Origins of the Chinese Hyperinflatio". Foundation for Economic Education.
  2. ^ Babcock, J. M.; Makinen, G. E. (1975). "The Chinese Hyperinflation Reexamined". Journal of Political Economy. 83 (6): 1259–1267. ISSN 0022-3808.
  3. ^ Reed, Lawrence W. (2022-05-11). "What China's Hyperinflation in the 1940s Can Teach Americans". Foundation for Economic Education.
  4. ^ Ebeling, Richard M. (2020-07-05). "The Great Chinese Inflation: Inflation Undermined Popular Support Against Communism". Foundation for Economic Education.
  5. ^ a b Chang 1958, 1.1 Prewar Background
  6. ^ a b Chang 1958, 1.2 The First Period of War Inflation, 1937-1939
  7. ^ "WWII JAPANESE COUNTERFEITING OF CHINESE CURRENCY". Newman Numismatic Portal, Washington University in St. Louis. 2015-01-11.
  8. ^ Chang 1958, 2 War Inflation, 1940-1945

Sources

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