Global silver trade from the 16th to 18th centuries

The global silver trade between the Americas and Europe from the sixteenth to nineteenth centuries was a spillover of the Columbian Exchange which had a profound effect on the world economy. In fact, many scholars consider the silver trade to mark the beginning of a genuinely global economy, with one historian noting that silver "went round the world and made the world go round."[1] Although global, much of that silver ended up in the hands of the Chinese, as they accepted it as a form of currency.[2] In addition to the global economic changes the silver trade engendered, it also put into motion a wide array of political transformations in the early modern era. "New World mines," concluded several prominent historians "supported the Spanish empire," acting as a linchpin of the Spanish economy.[3]

Spaniards at the time of the Age of Exploration discovered vast amounts of silver, much of which was from the Potosí silver mines, to fuel their trade economy. Potosí's deposits were rich and Spanish American silver mines were the world's cheapest sources of it. The Spanish acquired the silver, minting it into the peso de ocho (a currency) to then use it as a means of purchase; that currency was so widespread that even the United States accepted it as valid until the Coinage Act of 1857.[4] As the Spanish need for silver increased, new innovations for more efficient extraction of silver were developed, such as the amalgamation method of using mercury to extract silver from ore.[5]

In the two centuries that followed the discovery of Potosí, the Spanish silver mines in the Americas produced 40,000 tons of silver.[6] Altogether, more than 150,000 tons of silver were shipped from Potosí by the end of the 18th century.[7] From 1500 to 1800, Mexico and Peru produced about 80%[8] of the world's silver with 30% of it eventually ending up in China (largely because of British merchants who used it to purchase exotic Chinese commodities). In the late 16th and early 17th century, Japan was also exporting heavily into China and the foreign trade at large.[8]

As has been demonstrated, China dominated silver imports. The market value of silver in the Ming territory was double its value elsewhere, which provided great arbitrage profit for the Europeans and Japanese.[8] The abundance of silver in China made it easy for the country to mint it into coinage. That process was so widespread that local Chinese government officials would demand taxes to be paid in silver to the point that silver eventually backed all of China's economy.

First paper money

The world's first paper money ("flying money") was invented by the Chinese[9] and they needed some commodity to back it. Traditional coins were useful, but the amount of coins needed for large purchases could be bulky and dangerous to transport. That problem was solved when the Chinese created small pieces of paper with pictures of the coin printed on them.[10] By the nature of their geography, China had no real amount of precious metals of their own to back the paper money they invented. Because the Spaniards didn't find gold but did find copious amounts of silver, the Spaniards and the rest of Europe used this silver to purchase the commodities of choice from China, solving both of their problems.[11]

Silver in the Americas

Silver Peso of Philip V

A result of the Spanish colonization of the Americas was the discovery, production, and trade of precious metals. The Spanish, along with other European nations, had a great desire for Chinese goods such as silk and porcelain.[12] The Europeans did not have any goods or commodities which China desired, so they traded silver to make up for their trade deficit.[13] The two most important mining colonies of the Spanish Empire were Peru and Mexico, who were estimated to have provided one-hundred thousand tons of silver from the mid 16th Century to the end of the colonial period.[14] The richest, and most productive mine in the Americas was that of Potosí in what is modern day Bolivia.[14] The richest camp in Mexico was in the city of Zacatecas, however the production of this mine was far less than that of Potosi.[14]

Mining Processes in the Americas

More simplistic native mining techniques dominated American mining for the early part of the 16th Century.[5] Mining in the Americas became formally industrialized when the process of mercury amalgamation became popularized. Mercury amalgamation was invented by a Spaniard in central Mexico in the 1550s.[5] Historians dispute what individual was the first to invent the process, however most agree that it was a Spaniard. Mercury was the one of the highest costs of production for the Americas, since much of it had to be shipped.[14] The ratio of Mercury to silver produced was about two to one.[14] Furthermore, German miners introduced the stamp mill and lead smelting in the 1530s.[5] Gunpowder was often used to blast of large holes to create the mine shafts, although there were not many deep shafts.[5] Potosí had the most amount of ore, however it was lower quality than that of Mexico.

Mining production in the Americas largely depended on native labor in both Mexico and Peru.[5] In Mexico, many of the natives worked as wage laborers by the middle of the 17th Century.[15] However, the labor system known as the repartimiento still existed in some places.[15] Silver production in Mexico was relatively cheap when compared to that of Peru, and the general trend of Mexican labor systems was that towards waged labor.[14] In Peru mines, the mit'a system was a dominant form of native labor subjection, although waged laborers worked on the mines as well.[14] Natives under the mit'a system were paid much less, and this was necessary for the production of silver to continue in Peru where costs were relatively high.[14]

Global Flow of Silver

The ultimate destination for the mass amounts of silver produced in the Americas and Japan was China.[16] Silver from the Americas flowed mostly across the Atlantic and made its way to the far east.[13] A popular route was around the Cape of Good Hope into the east, and sometimes it came over land.[13] Major outposts for the silver trade were located in Southeast Asian countries, such as the Philippines.[17] The city of Manilla served as a primary outpost of the exchange of goods between the Americas, Japan, and China.[17] However, there is a large amount of silver that crossed across the Pacific Ocean directly from the Americas as well.[16] There are not many records of the amount of silver which crossed the Pacific due to it being discouraged by the Spanish monarchy, so estimates highly vary.[15]

Silver also found its way across other parts of the world as well. India and Europe both received a fair amount of silver.[13] This silver was often locally traded for other commodities, such as gold or crops. In India, silver flowed from the south to the north, and gold flowed the opposite way.[13] Often silver and gold were manufactured into jewelry or hoarded as treasure.

China and the Demand for Silver

China was the ultimate destination in which silver would flow towards. In exchange, the Chinese traded their popular goods such as silk and porcelain. China had a high demand for silver due to its shift from paper money to coins in the early period of the Ming Dynasty.[18] The Ming paper currency eventually failed due to self-imposed inflation along with an inability to stop the production of counterfeit bills.[19] The Ming attempted to produce copper coins as a new form of currency, but production was inconsistent.[18] Hence silver became of high value because it was a valid currency that could be processed abroad. The bimetallic ratio of silver to gold was about two to one, which meant that European and Japanese merchants made a large amount of profit.[20] In the 1640s, the bimetallic ratios in China converged with the rest of the world, before experiencing another population boom.[16] The new population boom was a product of the introduction of New World crops into China, mainly sweet potatoes, which could be more easily grown.[16] By this time, the silver mines in Japan were largely depleted and the New World became China's primary source for silver.[17]

Initially, Japan served as China's primary source for silver in the 16th Century.[12] In exchange for silver, China would provide Japan with silk and gold.[17] Japan and China did not directly trade with each other, due to political tensions.[17] This meant that European entities and countries, such as the Dutch and Portuguese served as a middle man between the two countries.[17]

China's Silver Dominance

In the famed The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith noted the sheer force and great reach of the global silver trade. He was impressed by its market value but more intrigued with the way this single item of commerce brought together new and old worlds i.e. the Americas and China.[21] Although China acted as the cog running the wheel of global trade, Japan's huge contribution of silver exports to China were critical to the world economy and China's liquidity and success with the commodity. Historians posit Europeans would have been left out of world trade, and China may have fallen prey to conquest by settlers of the Americas if not for Japanese silver mining. Silver was paramount to East Asia's introduction into the global trade market.[22] Under the Ming and Qing empires, China hoarded silver to boost its economy and increase its trading power.[23]

Many historians argue that silver was responsible for the birth of global economics and trade. According to this view, global trade commenced in 1571 when Manila was founded and became the first trading post linking America and Asia due to the expansive and profitable silver trade.[24] In fact, research shows the amount of silver traveling from Manila to China was approximately three million pesos or 94,000 kilograms in the early 1600s.[25]

The rarity of silver production was seen as an opportunity for China to control the currency's value and support its own national currency. Silver was one of the only accepted trade items from Europeans and its value in China was astronomical compared to rest of the world. In fact, its value was twice that of Spain in the 16th and 17th centuries.[22] Between 1600 and 1800 China received 100 tons of silver on average per year. A large populace near the Lower Yangzte averaged a hundreds of taels of silver per household in the late 16th century.[26]

Silver even played a large role when defending Toyotomi Hideyoshi's attemptive take over of Ming ruled Joseon Korea. The Ming Ministiry of War sent approximately 140,000 liang of silver to its soldiers and required provinces to provide silver as tax for the war effort as well.[27] In the sixteenth century, the daimyos of Southwest Japan hoped for unhinged global trade but were stopped due to Ming China trade policies. Still, Japan became a player in the global economy via frequent Ming merchant ships arriving to extract Japan's abundance of silver and exchange goods. Japan increased its wealth through successful trilateral trade with Portugal and China as Japan now had Chinese goods to offer the Portuguese who had silver mines of their own.[28] Founder of the Ming China dynasty, Hongwu, actually sought to eliminate silver from the market due to his fear of inflation which he previously experienced in the Yuan dynasty. His attempt involved imposing harsh limits on silver mining to stop its flow into the market and subsequently replaced it with baochao or paper money. However, the currency never popularized and silver proved its mainstay as a global currency.[29]

Opium Wars

Despite some restrictions, silver continued to drive trade through its popularity in Europe. This, combined with a high British demand for Chinese tea, created chronic trade deficits for European governments, which were forced to risk silver deficits to supply merchants in Asia.[30] As supplies of silver decreased in Europe, Europeans had less ability to purchase highly coveted Chinese goods. Merchants were no longer able to sustain the China trade through profits made by selling Chinese goods in the West and were forced to take bullion out of circulation in Europe to buy goods in China.[31]

In the 19th century, American merchants began to introduce opium to Chinese markets. The demand for opium rose rapidly and was so profitable that Chinese opium dealers began to seek out more suppliers of the drug, thus inaugurating the opium trade; one merchant declared that Opium "is like gold. It can sell any time."[30] From 1804 to 1820, a period when the Qing Dynasty needed to finance the suppression of the White Lotus Rebellion, Chinese merchants were soon exporting silver to pay for opium rather than Europeans paying for Chinese goods with the precious metal.[32]

The Qing imperial court debated whether and how to end the opium trade, eventually settling on regulations on consumption. That measure, however, resulted in an increase in drug smuggling by Europeans and Chinese traders. In 1810, the Daoguang Emperor issued an edict concerning the matter, declaring, "Opium has a harm. Opium is a poison, undermining our good customs and morality. Its use is prohibited by law."[33] Following a debate at court in 1836 on whether to legalize the drug or crack down on its use, the emperor decided on the latter. An upright official, Commissioner Lin Zexu led the campaign against opium as a kind of "drug czar." The British, offended by the seizure of their property in opium, sent a large naval expedition to China to end the restrictive conditions under which they had long traded with that country. Thus began the first Opium War, in which Britain's industrialized military might was proven in China's rout. The Treaty of Nanking, which ended the war in 1842 largely on British terms, imposed numerous restrictions on Chinese sovereignty and opened five ports to European traders.[34]

See also

References

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  2. von Glahn, Richard (1996). "Myth and Reality of China's Seventeenth Century Monetary Crisis". Journal of Economic History. 2: 132. ... silver wanders throughout all the world... before flocking to China, where it remains as if at its natural center.
  3. Flynn, Dennis O.; Giraldez, Arturo (1995). "Born with a 'Silver Spoon'". Journal of World History. 2: 210.
  4. "A Century of Lawmaking". Library of Congress. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
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