Wang Xijue

{{about||the Taiwanese pilot who defected to China|China Airlines Flight 334|the writer|Li Guangtian}}

{{Infobox Chancellor

|name=Wang Xijue

|image=Wang Xijue.jpg

|birth_date=1534

|death_date=1614 (aged 80)

|office=52nd Senior Grand Secretary

|term=1593–1594

|predecessor=Zhao Zhigao

|successor=Zhao Zhigao

|monarch=Wanli

}}

{{family name hatnote|Wang|lang=Chinese}}

Wang Xijue ({{zh|t=王錫爵}}, 1534–1614) was a Ming dynasty court official in China. In a 1593 report to the emperor, he wrote: "The venerable elders of my home district explain that the reason grain is cheap despite poor harvests in recent years is due entirely to the scarcity of silver coin. The national government requires silver for taxes but disburses little silver in its expenditures. As the price of grain falls, tillers of the soil receive lower returns on their labors, and thus less land is put into cultivation."

References

  • The College Board, 2006 AP World History Free Response Questions

{{Senior Grand Secretaries of the Ming dynasty}}

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Wang, Xijue}}

Category:1534 births

Category:1614 deaths

Category:Politicians from Suzhou

Category:Senior grand secretaries of the Ming dynasty

Category:16th-century Chinese scholars

Category:Date of birth unknown

Category:Date of death unknown

Category:People from Taicang