A Thirst for Silver: Trade Disruption, Silver Shortage, and the Institutional Causes of Unrest in Nineteenth-Century China

Spatial, International and Macroeconomics Seminar
Image - Chinese Silver Coins

We provide new evidence that rigid trade and taxation systems, together with a global decline in silver production following the Spanish American wars of independence, fueled rising silver prices and subsequent social instability in early nineteenth-century Qing China.

Speaker
Yuan Zi
Date
Tuesday 10 Mar 2026, 11:30 - 12:30
Type
Seminar
Room
C2-3
Building
Theil Building
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Drawing on newly assembled county-level panel data and historical commercial routes, we show that regions farther from Canton, the empire’s sole legal international port, faced sharper silver price increases and higher conflict incidence after the silver shock. 

We argue that silver taxation was central to this relationship: because taxes were fixed in silver, price increases raised the real tax burden and heightened the risk of unrest. 

Quantitative estimates indicate that the global silver shock lowered China’s aggregate welfare by 1.1%, with taxation accounting for most of the loss. 

Counterfactual analysis suggests that opening additional international ports would have made the negative impacts more uneven across regions and hence more politically destabilising, though the effect was limited. By contrast, fiscal reform emerges as a more critical policy lever for mitigating the adverse consequences of the silver shock.

Registration for bilateral, lunch or dinner

Lunch will be provided. If you would like to meet the guest speaker for a bilateral, join for lunch or dinner, then please register by filling in the registration form.

See also

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Virginia Minni (University of Chicago, Booth School of Business)
Langeveld Building from outside in winter.

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