Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/234

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JAPAN

relations were re-established between Japan and the Occident in modern times, and also the embarrassments that resulted from the marked difference between the silver price of gold in Japan and its silver price in Europe at the epoch when the trade was opened. Another fact which greatly helped to render foreign commerce unpopular at first was an extraordinary appreciation of prices that followed its inauguration. The severity of the fluctuation may be seen from the following table:—

Commodity. Quantity. Silver Price
in 1830.
Silver Price
in 1865.
Rice 1 koku 91.00 momme 207.50 momme
Barley ‘‘ 32.50 ‘‘ 160.00 ‘‘
Salt ‘‘ 10.31 ‘‘ 62.50 ‘‘
Shoyu (soy) 1 barrel 24.10 ‘‘ 62.63 ‘‘
Rape-oil 1 koku 251.00 ‘‘ 1220.00 ‘‘
Brown sugar 1 catty 0.75 ‘‘ 3.175 ‘‘
Firewood 20 kwamme 4.70 ‘‘ 22.60 ‘‘
Charcoal 1 bag 4.10 ‘‘ 15.10 ‘‘
Mats 10 36.74 ‘‘ 180.00 ‘‘
Dried Banito 10 kwamme 200.00 ‘‘ 1600.00 ‘‘
Herring fertiliser ‘‘ 19.00 ‘‘ 110.00 ‘‘
Mushrooms 1 160.00 ‘‘ 800.00 ‘‘
Lacquer 1 kwamme 85.00 ‘‘ 450.00 ‘‘
Tiles (roof) 1000 150.00 ‘‘ 800.00 ‘‘
Copper 100 catties 320.00 ‘‘ 1380.00 ‘‘

Two hundred per cent of this appreciation was due to change of coinage effected by the Government in order to convert the ratio between gold and silver from one-fifth, at which it stood in Japan, to one-fifteenth, the European figure. But in many cases, as the table shows, the apprecia-

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