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2013 Reprint of 1950 Edition. Full facsimile of the original
edition, not reproduced with Optical Recognition Software. There
are four ancient histories of China. The second oldest is the Han
Shu, the "Book of Han," which is divided into the Former Han and
Later Han dynastic histories. Chapter 24 of the Former Han Shu,
dealing with food and money, comprises the bulk of this scholarly
work. The value of the "Book of Han" lies in the fact that it was
written shortly after the period which it describes (the Former Han
Dynasty covers the period from 206 B.C. to A.D. 19). The historian
had access to materials which have since been lost and, what is
more, was in a position to reproduce faithfully the spirit of the
era. The shortcomings are, from an economist's point of view, the
lack of systematic specific in- formation on prices and on forms of
economic activity. Nevertheless, Han Shu 24 makes interesting
reading. The author(s) recorded the then prevalent belief that
agriculture is the basis of all endeavor and that trade is a
somewhat superfluous, and often wicked, enterprise. Another idea
preserved for posterity is that the forces of the market have to be
contained. During the Han period a number of emperors instituted
complicated price-equalization programs for agricultural
commodities, and one of the early Han rulers unequivocally
recognized that the demand for agricultural commodities was highly
inelastic. The orientation of this probably definitive translation
is toward the Chinese language scholar and, in a lesser way, toward
the historian. The additional commentaries, of which there are a
number in the book, are slanted the same way.
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