Directory_and_Chronicle_1901 — Page 571

Directories & Chronicles 香港指南 All

CHINA

117

to 50 members, under two presidents, the one of Manchu and the other of Chinese birth. By the ancient custom of the empire, all the members of this board are privileged to present any remonstrance to the sovereign. One censor must be present at the meeting of each of the six government boards.

The amount of the public revenue of China is not known, and estimates concerning it vary greatly. The Imperial Maritime Customs receipts form the only item upoň which exact figures are obtainable, and these for the year 1898 amounted to Tls. 22,503,397. Mr. E. A. Parker, formerly of the British Consular Service, in 1896 published the following estimate of the receipts from the other principal sources:-Land tax Tls. 20,000,000, Salt Tls. 10,000,000, Lekin Tls. 15,000,000, Native Customs Tls. 3,000,000, Miscellaneous Tls. 3,000,000. In addition the grain tribute may also be estimated at Tls. 3,000,000, making a total estimated revenue of Tls. 77,000,000. The amounts given above are those supposed to be accounted for to the Government, but very much larger amounts are raised from the people and absorbed by the officials in the way of peculation. With the significant exception of the Maritime Customs, which is under foreign control, no item of revenue shows any elasticity. The land tax, salt revenue, Lekin or Native Customs, are all about the same figures as they were ten years ago, although it is a matter of common notoriety that these sources of revenue have increased indefinitely.

China had no foreign debt till the end of 1874, when a loan of £627,675, bearing 8 per cent. interest, was contracted through the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, under Imperial authority, and secured by the Customs' revenue. Afterwards a number of other loans, of comparatively moderate amount, were contracted, mostly through the agency of the Hongkong and Shanghai Bank, and several of them have been paid off. Up to 1894 the total foreign debt of China was inconsiderable, but since then extensive borrowings have had to be made to meet the expenses of the war with Japan and the indemnity, which was Tls. 200,000,000 (at exchange of 3s. 31d.), with a further Tls. 20,000,000 for the retrocession of the Liaotung Peninsula. The last instalment was paid in 1898, and the total indebtedness of the country is now £55,755,000, the principal loans being the Russian of 1895, the Anglo-German of 1896, and the Anglo-Gernian of 1898, each of £16,000,000. Recently several minor loans, amounting in all to less than £4,000,000, have been contracted through the agency of the foreign banks for the purposes of railway construction. It is but fair to say that these loans have been devoted to their purpose, and will automatically redeem themselves if efficient manage- ment of the lines be assured. In some cases the lines have been hypothecated to the banks as security, and these institutions have nominated a foreign accountant.

AREA AND POPULATION

China proper, extending over 1,336,841 English square miles, is divided into eighteen provinces, the area and population of which are given below, the figures with an being from Chinese official data for 1882, those with a t from the data of 1879, and Folkien being estimated on the basis of the census of 1844;-

*

Estimated Popultn. per

Province

Provincial Capital

Area English Square Miles

Population square mile

Chilli +

Peking

58,949

17,937,000

304

Shantung

Tsinan

53,762

30,247,835

557

Shansi *

Taiyuen..

56,268

12,211,453

221

Honan *.

Kaifung.

66,913

22,115,827

340

Kiangsu *

Nanking

Anhwei*

Ngankin

92,961 {

20,905,171

470

20,596,288

425

Kiangsi +

Nanchang.

72,176

21,534,118

340

Chekiang *

Hangchow

39,150

11,588,692

296

Folkien

Foochow

38,500

22,190,556

574

Hupeh *.

Wuchang

22,190,556

473

Hunan*.

Changchau

144,770

21,002,604

282

Shensi t

Sigan

8,432,193

126

Kansuh + Szechuen *

Lanchow

192,850

9,285,377

74

Chingtu..

166,800

67,712,897

406

Kwangtung Kwangsi + Kweichau +

Yunnan t

*

Canton

79,456

29,706,249

377

Kwelin

78,250

5,151,327

634

Kweiyang

6-4,554

7,669,181

118

Yunnan.

107,969

11,721,576

108

1,312,328

383,253,029

292

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