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| 正面描述 | The obverse carries a fine guilloche underprint across the entire field in light grey-blue tones. To the left, a letterpress vignette renders an industrial facility — likely a grain processing or coal chemical plant — in dark ink with detailed linework. At right, the denomination 壹仟克 (One Thousand Grams) is set within an orange cloud-shaped ornamental frame, with the subsidiary inscription 壹公斤 (One Kilogram) below it. A decorative purple border with scalloped and lattice motifs runs along the bottom edge, incorporating the year 1990 within a central cartouche. |
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| 正面铭文 | 1000g 乌海市市内面粉券 1000g 壹仟克 (壹公斤) 1990 (Translation: 1000g Wuhai City Flour Coupon 1000g One Thousand Grams (One Kilogram) 1990) |
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Chinese grain rationing coupons (粮票) were a product of the planned economy infrastructure built after 1953, when the state monopolized grain procurement and distribution. By 1990, the system was already fracturing — market reforms had been accelerating since 1984, and most urban areas were seeing parallel free markets undercut the ration system entirely. A municipal-level flour coupon from Wuhai this late in the program is a minor footnote to that unraveling: local bureaus continued printing and issuing coupons even as the national system lost coherence, and many were never redeemed.
Wuhai, a coal-mining prefecture-level city on the Yellow River, had a relatively small and industrially concentrated population, which likely kept print runs modest.