Finance and Silver
MTA
Currency, Credit, and the Making of Modern Asian Markets
2nd Edition
*Finance and Silver* explores the historical evolution of Asian financial markets from the sixteenth century to the present, centering on the role of silver as a "social technology." The narrative begins with the Ming Dynasty’s "Single Whip" reforms, which transitioned China’s fiscal system to a silver standard and tethered the region to global bullion circuits, particularly the Spanish Manila galleons. The book details how this reliance on silver facilitated the growth of sophisticated domestic credit networks, such as China’s Shanxi banks and the Indian Ocean’s *hundi* networks, while highlighting the persistent challenges of standardization, bimetallism, and the volatility of metallic supply.
The middle chapters examine the impact of Western imperialism and the introduction of colonial mints and exchange banks. The rise of "treaty ports" like Shanghai and the construction of railways signaled a shift toward modern joint-stock banking and international trade finance. The book analyzes the nineteenth-century "crises of convertibility" caused by the global shift to the gold standard, which destabilized silver-based economies and contributed to the fiscal decline of the Qing Empire. This period transitioned into the twentieth-century era of total war and hyperinflation, which eventually led to the demonetization of silver and the adoption of fiat currencies under the post-war Bretton Woods system.
In the contemporary era, the text traces the rise of "developmentalism," where newly independent Asian states used directed credit and central planning to drive industrialization. This evolved into the liberalization and "big bangs" of the 1980s and 90s, followed by the catastrophic 1997 financial crisis. The aftermath of 1997 spurred a focus on building foreign reserves and regional cooperation, ultimately paving the way for the internationalization of the Chinese renminbi and the rise of offshore markets like Singapore’s Asian Dollar Market.
The final section explores the digital revolution in Asian finance, characterized by fintech, mobile money, and the emergence of central bank digital currencies like the digital yuan. The book concludes by assessing the modern "ecology of money," arguing that while technology has leapfrogged traditional infrastructure to promote financial inclusion, the region still faces systemic challenges related to deep economic inequality and environmental sustainability. Throughout, the book emphasizes that Asian finance remains a hybrid of ancient social trust and cutting-edge digital infrastructure.
This book is ideal for economics and history students, scholars, and professionals seeking a deep understanding of Asia's financial evolution. It will particularly benefit researchers studying monetary systems, economic development, and financial history, as well as policy makers and finance professionals interested in the historical roots of contemporary Asian financial markets and the interplay between state policy, global trade, and local credit ecologies.
January 18, 2026
70,842 words
4 hours 58 minutes
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