2014年7月19日 星期六

China Was First Official Paper Money & Never Issued Gold or Silver Coins until Modern Times

傻的嗎?

中國實金實銀在清朝和民國時代都俾洋人呃去了, 又邊有實金實銀整金銀幣呢 ?

armstrongeconomics.com

QUESTION: Mr. Armstrong; I recently read that China issued gold and silver coins. I cannot find any such listing in any catalogue. Is this another story made up by goldbugs claiming money is only gold? Who really printed the first paper money, China or Sweden?
Thanks so much
DG

ANSWER: China always issued fiat bronze and iron coins. There never were any gold or silver coins whatsoever until modern times. The Emperor issued the first actual paper money. That is distinguished from banknotes, which were not actually money but were slips of paper that merely reflected assets in the bank. That is totally different from the China notes of the 13th century. These were issued by the government China issues were actually simply government issues as legal tender which is why the Mongols had to continue accepting them when they conquered China. .
If we consider deposit slips as money (banknotes) the first is really ancient Egypt. They never issued any coinage whatsoever from at least 3000BC until the conquest by Alexander the Great in 334BC. That was the longest running system of such deposits slips (banknotes), which were grain, not gold or silver. Gold did not come into use as a medium of exchange until about the 7th century BC. It had to become common enough for circulation. Previously, gold was reserved only for ornamentation by kings – never the common man.

The China sycee was a type of silver or gold ingot type currency that was used in China until the 20th century. The name “sycee” is derived from the Cantonese words meaning “fine silk” because it was bolt of silk that was really money. That is what the world wanted from China first and second its porcelain from which people in the west called them Chinese because the sold china to the West. These ingots formed a two tier monetary system whereby they really facilitated international trade. The only circulating coins were bronze or iron.

Two tier monetary systems are very common. In Florence, Italy, gold was used only in international trade. Silver was used for local domestic circulation – not gold. Local bills were denominated in silver whereas international transactions were exclusively gold.

The US issued trade dollars to trade exclusively with China. They were on a silver standard during the 19th century – not gold.

2 則留言:

Gordon 提到...

馬田大師對中國古代錢幣唔熟悉woo

"国古代的银铸货币。至迟在春秋战国时期就产生了具有一定形状的银铸货币。20世纪60年代中期,湖北江陵楚墓出土了外包金银箔铅饼的殉葬冥币,说明楚国已经使用了圆饼形式的银铸币。"


http://baike.baidu.com/link?url=NS8puTt6adgrCrWKt5CvM6QGR_YnQ2h_804OrnaMg5r7GONVodPbdPCSvOQgvN1VHK_MKtAYfUT6YSSjbT9Naa

Lisa 提到...

我都唔熟呵, 只知一些清朝龍銀、民國袁世凱和孫中山銀幣 !
的確好少 !
共產黨時代無金銀幣出產, 因為國民黨已輸掉或運走大多數實金實銀 !