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Trade, Taxation, and Money MTA
Economic Histories of South Asia from Coinage to Global Capital

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About this book:
Trade, Taxation, and Money

*Trade, Taxation, and Money* provides a comprehensive longitudinal study of South Asian economic development, tracing the evolution of financial technologies from the standardized weights of the Indus Valley Civilization to contemporary digital payment ecosystems. The book argues that money and taxation have never been neutral instruments but are social technologies deeply embedded in political authority and communal trust. It details how early silver punch-marked coins and imperial Mauryan mints established standards of value that facilitated regional trade, while indigenous institutions like merchant guilds and temple treasuries functioned as sophisticated precursors to modern banking by mobilizing capital and enforcing moral economies of exchange.

The narrative highlights the resilience and sophistication of indigenous financial systems, particularly the *hundi* and *hawala* networks. These trust-based credit and remittance technologies allowed capital to flow across vast distances and through various political regimes, including the Mughal Empire, which achieved significant market integration through a standardized silver rupee. The text contrasts these organic systems with the transformative and often extractive fiscal experiments of British Company rule. The colonial era redirected South Asian capital to serve imperial interests through state monopolies on commodities like opium and salt, while simultaneously introducing transformative infrastructure—such as railways and telegraphs—that integrated the subcontinent into the global capitalist order at the cost of domestic de-industrialization.

In the twentieth century, the book examines the economic ruptures caused by World War finance and the Partition of 1947, which forced India and Pakistan to forge independent monetary identities and central banking institutions. It traces the shift from protected, state-led development planning and strict capital controls toward the era of liberalization in the 1990s, which opened the region to global foreign exchange markets. The final chapters analyze the current digital revolution, where fintech and mobile platforms like UPI and bKash are driving financial inclusion for the previously unbanked, while also addressing the nascent challenges of climate-linked fiscal policy and the necessity of "green" capital in an increasingly volatile ecological future.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Traces the evolution of money in South Asia from ancient punch‑marked coins and standardized weights to modern digital payments and fintech innovations.
  • Examines how temples, guilds, and indigenous banking instruments like hundi and hawala facilitated credit, risk management, and long‑distance trade across centuries.
  • Analyzes colonial revenue experiments, commodity monopolies (opium, cotton, salt), and fiscal‑military systems that reshaped agrarian economies and wealth extraction.
  • Shows how infrastructure (railways, telegraphs) and global bullion flows integrated regional markets and tied South Asia into worldwide price revolutions and trade networks.
  • Addresses contemporary challenges: climate‑responsive taxation, remittance corridors, monetary governance, and the role of central banks in balancing stability and inclusion.
Who's It For:

This book is intended for scholars and students of economic history, South Asian studies, and development economics who seek a deep, interdisciplinary understanding of how money, taxation, and trade have driven state formation and market integration. It will also appeal to policymakers, central bankers, and development practitioners interested in historical precedents for contemporary financial inclusion, remittance flows, and climate‑responsive fiscal policies. General readers with a keen interest in the global history of money and the socio‑economic transformation of South Asia will find the narrative both accessible and richly detailed.

Author:

Danielle Torres

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

March 7, 2026

Language:

English

Word Count:

43,123 words

Reading Time:

3 hours 1 minutes

Sample:

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