Institutional mosaic of financial institutions in the late Qing China and synthesis of organizational forms: from piaohao and qianzhuang to the central bank
https://doi.org/10.21202/2782-2923.2023.4.699-715
EDN: NCVVLC
Abstract
Objective: to determine the peculiarities of forming the banking system in late imperial China in terms of the interaction between traditional Chinese banking institutions, imported institutional forms, and state reform strategies.
Methods: qualitative methods (comparative analysis, generalization), historical and genetic method.
Results: based on a wide array of historical data, the history of the Chinese banking system development during the Qin dynasty decline is demonstrated. By the time of the Chinese economy “forced opening” by Western powers during the Opium Wars, China had its own quasi-banking institutions based on the established clan networks of trade organizations that covered the credit needs of the traditional economy. The local development of modern industries in China required modern approaches to the organization of banking activities. The lacuna was filled by foreign banks, which actually monopolized modern banking in China, and later by state-owned banks. It is shown that by the end of the Qing period all three participants of the banking industry – traditional banks, foreign banks and state banks – covered the needs of the Chinese economy. It is concluded that the banking industry of the late imperial period was a mosaic institutional fabric, combining both traditional and westernized elements and embedding clan ties traditional for China.
Scientific novelty: the article is the first attempt in Russia to comprehensively examine the evolution of the banking system of late Qing China.
Practical significance: the main conclusions of the article can be used in scientific and pedagogical activities in the study of economic history of traditional China, and may enrich the concepts of institutional economics concerning the limits and possibilities of institutional transformations.
About the Author
M. S. KruglovaRussian Federation
Mariya S. Kruglova, Cand. Sci. (History), Senior Researcher,
Moscow
References
1. Bailey, W., & Zhao, B. (2009). Familiarity, Convenience, and Commodity Money: Spanish and Mexican Silver Dollars in Qing and Republican China. http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1424070
2. Chen, F. (2022). Caizheng yu guojia zhili: qingdai feichang shiqi caizheng zhengcede diaozheng yu gengzhang [Finance and National Governance: Adjustments and Updates of Fiscal Policies during Extraordinary Periods in the Qing Dynasty]. Collected Papers of History Studies, 5, 4–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.19832/j.cnki.0559-8095.2022.0049
3. Chen, Q. (1937). Shanxi piaozhuang kaolue. [A brief review of Shanxi Piaozhuang]. Shanghai: Shanghai Commercial Press.
4. Chen, Z. (1993). Shanghai Finance: An Integrated Approach. Chinese Business History, 3(2), 3–6.
5. Chen, Z., Ma, C., & Sinclair, A. (2022). Banking on the Confucian Clan: Why China Developed Financial Markets So Late. http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3671280
6. Cheng, L. (2003). Banking in Modern China: Entrepreneurs, Professional Managers, and the Development of Chinese Banks, 1897–1937. Cambridge University Press.
7. Cohen, J., Chen, F., & Edwards, R. (1981). Essays on China’s Legal Tradition. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
8. Dean, A. (2018). A Coin for China? The Monetary Standards Debate at the End of the Qing Dynasty, 1900–1912. Modern China, 44(6), 591–619. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26588750
9. Fan, W. (1962). Zhongguo jindaishi [Modern Chinese history]. Beijing: Renmin chubanshe.
10. Goetzmann, W., Ukhov, A., & Zhu, N. (2001). China and the world financial markets 1870–1930: Modern lessons from historical globalization. SSRN Electronic Journal. Yale ICF Working Paper, 00-63. http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.289143
11. Greif, A., & Tabellini, G. (2017). The clan and the corporation: Sustaining cooperation in China and Europe. Journal of Comparative Economics, 45(1), 1–35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jce.2016.12.003
12. Han, X. (2014). Wanqing zai huangzhongde yinqian bijia biandong jiqi yingxiang yi “dingwu qihuang” zhongde shanxi weili [Changes in the silver-money ratio during the famine in the late Qing Dynasty and its impact, taking Shanxi in "Ding Wu Qi Huang" as an example]. History Monthly, 5, 79–92.
13. Hong, R. (1964). Zizheng xinpian [New chapter for aid in government]. In Taiping tianguo [Heavenly Kingdom of Great Peace]. Beijing: Kexue chubanshe.
14. Horesh, N. (2009). Shanghai's bund and beyond: British banks, banknote issuance, and monetary policy in China, 1842–1937. New Haven: Yale University Press.
15. Horesh, N. (2019). The monetary system of China under the Qing Dynasty. In S. Battilossi, Y. Cassis, & K. Yago (Eds.), Handbook of the History of Money and Currency (pp. 1–22). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-0622-7_54-1
16. Horesh, N. (2022). Foreign Banks of Issue in Prewar China: The Notes of the Netherlands Trading Society, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank and the International Banking Corporation. Histories, 2, 68–74. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2010006
17. Hu, A., & Tian, F. F. (2018). Still under the ancestors’ shadow? Ancestor worship and family formation in contemporary China. Demographic Research, 38(1), 1–26. https://doi.org/10.4054/demres.2018.38.1
18. Ji., Zh. (2003). A History of Modern Shanghai Banking: The Rise and Decline of China’s Finance Capitalism. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.
19. Jing, Y. (2014). Zhongguo shangye shi [The history of Chinese commerce]. Beijing: Zhongguo tiedao chubanshe.
20. King, F. (1988). The History of the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, vol. 1, The Hongkong Bank in Late Imperial China 1864–1902. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
21. Kirby, W. (1995). China unincorporated: Company law and business enterprise in twentieth-century China. The Journal of Asian Studies, 54(1), 43–63. https://doi.org/10.2307/2058950
22. Krug, B. (2008). Public Finance in China since the Late Qing Dynasty. Research Paper. Erasmus Research Institute of Management (ERIM), University and the Erasmus School of Economics (ESE) at Erasmus University.
23. Kruglova, M. (2023). Banking, Finance and Reform in the Nanjing Decade (1928–1937): A Synthetic Economic Policy. Theoretical Economics, 1, 127–141. https://doi.org/10.52342/2587-7666vte_2023_1_127_141
24. Kruglova, M. S. (2022). Banking sector in China during the Nanjing decade (1928–1937) as an example of synthesis in economic policy. The role of informal ties. Terra Economicus, 20(4), 75–86 (in Russ.). https://doi.org/10.18522/2073-6606-2022- 20-4-75-86
25. Kwan, M. B. (2001). The Salt Merchants of Tianjin: State-Making and Civil Society in Late Imperial China. University of Hawai’i Press.
26. La Porta, R., Lopez-de-Silanes, F., Shleifer, A., & Vishny, R. W. (1997). Legal determinants of external finance. The Journal of Finance, 52(3), 1131–1150. https://doi.org/10.2307/2329518
27. La Porta, R., Lopez-de-Silanes, F., Shleifer, A., & Vishny, R. W. (1998). Law and finance. Journal of Political Economy, 106(6), 1113–1155. https://doi.org/10.1086/250042
28. Lan, R. (2015). Transformation of China’s Modern Banking System: From the Late Qing Era to the 1930s. Vol. 1. Choice Reviews Online. https://doi.org/10.5860/choice.190350
29. Lin, C., Ma, C., Sun, Y., & Xu, Y. (2021). The telegraph and modern banking development, 1881–1936. Journal of Financial Economics, 141(2), 730-749. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfineco.2021.04.011.
30. Lowenstein, M. (2022). Paper Money in the Late Qing and Early Republic, 1820–1935. Working Paper 22004.
31. Lue, B., & Liao, Ch. (2007). Wanqing guozhai jiqi Zhongyang jiquan caizheng tizhide wajie [The National Debt and the Collapse of the Centralized Financial System in the Late Qing Dynasty]. China State Finance, 8, 77–78.
32. Ma, D. (2012). Money and monetary system in China in the 19th–20th century: an overview. Economic History Working Papers 41940, London School of Economics and Political Science, Department of Economic History.
33. Ma, D., & Von Glahn, R. (Eds.). (2022). The Cambridge Economic History of China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
34. McElderry, A. (1995). Securing Trust and Stability: Chinese Finance in the Late Nineteenth Century. In R. Brown (Ed.), Chinese Business Enterprise in Asia (pp. 27–44). London: Routledge.
35. Morck, R., & Yang, F. (2010). The Shanxi Banks. Working Paper15884. National Bureau of Economic Research. https://doi.org/10.3386/w15884
36. Peng, K., & Lin, Z. (2020). Cong li de xiuding kan qingdai zhili moshi: Yi da Qing luli, huidian shili weizhu de fenxi [Governance model as reflected in legal amendments: An analysis based on the Qing code and collection of legal cases]. Working paper, Henan University.
37. Rajan, R. G., & Zingales, L. (1998). Which capitalism? Lessons from the East Asian crisis. Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 11(3), 40–48. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-6622.1998.tb00501.x
38. Sheehan, B., & Zhu, Y. (2022). Financial Institutions and Financial Markets. In D. Ma, & R. Von Glahn (Eds.), The Cambridge Economic History of China (pp. 280–323). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108348485.010
39. Srinivas, W. (1914). Finance in China. Shanghai: North-China Daily News & Herald. Sun, G. (2019). China's Shadow Banking: Bank's Shadow and Traditional Shadow Banking. BIS Working Papers 822, Bank for International Settlements.
40. Vasiliev, S. (2020). Early modernization in sung China. Issues of Economic Theory, 8(3), 130–156. (In Russ.).
41. Volynskii, A. I. (2021). Is There a Link Between Complementary Economic Institutions and Ideologies? Russian Journal of Economic Theory, 18(4), 497–511. (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.31063/2073-6517/2021.18-4.2
42. Volynskii, A. I. (2022). The Theory of the Shifting Mode of Reproduction and Institutionalism: Is Synthesis Possible? AlterEconomics, 19(3), 424–441. https://doi.org/10.31063/AlterEconomics/2022.19-3.2
43. Wang, J. (1983). Shijiu shiji xifang ziben zhuyi dui Zhongguo de jingji qinlue [Western capitalists’ economic invasion of China during the nineteenth century]. Beijing: Renmin chubanshe.
44. Wang, L. (2021). Chinese Hinterland Capitalism and Shanxi Piaohao: Banking, State, and Family, 1720–1910. New York, Routledge.
45. Wang, Y. (1998). Rishengchang piaohao. Taiyuan: Shanxi Economic Publishing House.
46. Wang, Y. (2001). Bainian cangsang rishengchang. [A century of vicissitudes of Rishengchang]. Taiyuan: Shanxi Economic Publishing House.
47. Weber, M. (2017). Economic ethics of world religions. Experiences of comparative sociology of religion. Confucianism and Daoism. Saint Petersburg: Vladimir Dal'. (In Russ.).
48. Yanchenko, D. G. (2023). The Russian-Chinese Borderland in the Late Imperial Period in the Revision of Trade and Economic Relations. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History, 68(2), 317–333. (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu02.2023.202
49. Yang, Y. (1930). Shanghai jinrong zuzhi gaiyao [Shanghai’s financial organizations]. Shanghai: Shangwu yinshuguan. Yingdui xinshi yinhangde fengxian yu weiji: wanqing minguode jinrong jianguan zhidao [Coping with the risks and crises of new banks: Financial supervision in the late Qing Dynasty and the Republic of China]. (2023). https://new.qq.com/rain/a/20230914A05CA100
50. Zhang, G. (1989). Wan Qing qianzhuang he piaohao yanjiu [Research on qianzhuang and piaohao in the late Qing Dynasty]. Beijing: Zhonghua shuju.
51. Zurndorfer, H. (2004). Imperialism, globalization, and public finance: the case of late Qing China. Economic History Working Papers 22487. London School of Economics and Political Science, Department of Economic History.
Review
For citations:
Kruglova M.S. Institutional mosaic of financial institutions in the late Qing China and synthesis of organizational forms: from piaohao and qianzhuang to the central bank. Russian Journal of Economics and Law. 2023;17(4):699-715. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.21202/2782-2923.2023.4.699-715. EDN: NCVVLC