756
CHINA
35,539,917. Mr. H. B. Morse, Commissioner of Customs and Statistical Secretary to the Inspectorate-General of Customs, in 1907, computed the revenue of the Imperial Government at Taels 102,924,000, and the imperial expenditure, so far as is known or reported, was calculated at Taels 136,196,000, giving an excess of expenditure over revenue amounting to Tls. 33,572,000, “indicating, as the government is far from bank. rupt, a considerable degree of elasticity in the revenue." Besides the revenue from the Customs given above, the receipts from the other principal sources, allocated to Imperial purposes, are in round sums: Land tax, Taels 26,000,000; Tribute, Tls. 7,500,000; Native Customs, Tls. 4,000,000; Salt gabelle, Tls. 13,000,000; Miscellaneous taxes, Tls. 4,000,000 ; Lekin on general merchandise and native customs, Tls. 14,000,000. Mr. Morse estimates that in alition about Tls. 142,000,000 for provincialadministration and Tls.43,000,000 for local administration, is raised, giving a grand total of Tls. 284,000,000-a sum which, as Mr. Morse remarks, is an obviously insufficient sum on which to maintain the fabric of government of an Empire like China. Recently a serious attempt to evolve a National Budget has been discussed, but this is a task which has been described by a competent authority as one to puzzle the shrewdest firm of chartered account- ants. 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, where they are still under native control, 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. Many modifications were decided upon in 1901 in the fiscal plans of both the central and provisional governments to enable China to meet the obliga- tions created by the indemnity paid to the Powers on account of the Boxer rising in 1900. In some districts Lekin and Native Customs were brought under the control of the Imperial Maritime Customs and hypothecations made on the salt revenues. The tariff was raised to an eflective 5 per cent, ad valorem, These innovations will obtain till 1940, when the amortization of China's obligations will be complete, Sir Robert Hart, the Inspector-General of the Imperial Maritime Customs, estimated in 1994 the possible revenue from a reform of the Land Tax at 400 million tarls.
China had no foreign debt till the end of 1871, 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. 3]d.), with a further Tis, 20,000,000 for the retrocession of the Liaotung Peninsula. The last instalment was paid in 1898, and the total indebtedness of the country up to 1900 was £55,755,000, the princi- pal loans being the Russian of 1895, the Anglo-Gerinan of 1896, and the Anglo-German of 1898, each of £16,000,000. The country's obligations in 1901 were increased by a sum of Tls. 450,001,000, the amount of the indemnity paid to the Powers to meet (1) the expenses of the Expeditionary Forces, and (2) claims for compensation for losses to missions, corporations, individuals, etc. Several minor loans have since been obtained, chiefly for railway construction, and China's total foreign debt outstanding amounts now to about £140,000,000.
AREA AND POPULATION
China proper, extending over 1,335,841 square miles, is divided into eighteen provinces, according to the official records for 190, the area and population of the various prefectures and provinces are as given :
Province and Population
Province and Population
Szechuen
79,500,000 * Fukien
20,000,000
Shantung
38,000,000
Manchuria
17,000,000
Anhwei
Hupeh
Kwangtung Chihli Kiangsi. Kiangsu Hunan
36,000,000 31,000,000 32,000,000 29 400,000
Chekiang
11,800,000
:
Kwangsi
8,000,000
Yunnan.
8,000,000
24 531,000
Other Provinces (Shansi, Shensi,
Kansu, Honan, Kweichau).
55,000,000
23,980,000.
22,000,000
Total............ 139,214,000
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