Page:Things Japanese (1905).djvu/122

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110
Currency.

bling them to be strung on a string, are called tempō, because coined during the period styled Tempō (A. D. 1830—1844) They are worth eight rin, but are now almost obsolete. The smaller round coins, also having holes in the middle, and commonly known to foreigners as "cash," are worth, some 10 mo, some 15, some 20. No coins of this kind are now issued. The style has been condemned by the modern Japanese, because not sanctioned by European precedent. But what is there to consult in such matters save convenience? And let him who has handled a thousand coppers thus strung, and attempted to handle a thousand loose ones, speak to the relative convenience of the two methods.

The Imperial mint is situated at Ōsaka. It was started under British auspices, but the last of the British employes left in 1889. The manufactory of paper money is at Tōkyō, being carried on at an institution called the Insatsu Kyoku, which well deserves a visit. Both the coins and the paper notes possess considerable artistic merit.

In Japan, as elsewhere, financiers have been engrossed by the monometallic and bimetallic controversy, the currency problem being not the least of those which the Government has had to solve. Forty years ago, when the country was still practically closed, little specie was in actual use, but there existed a banking system which sustained mercantile credit for the limited amount of internal business then transacted. Later, paper money was extensively employed, and at one time suffered great depreciation,—as much as sixty per cent in the year 1881,—but was brought again to a par with silver by the issue of convertible silver notes, and so remained for over a decade. The industrial boom which followed the war with China in 1894-5, created a necessity for securing foreign capital to finance multitudinous undertakings which Japan herself had not the means to carry on unaided. Thereupon the Government, recognising the impossibility of borrowing in the Western money markets so long as Japan remained on a silver basis, passed a bill making the currency a