Grain and flour ration coupons issued by county-level bureaus were a fixture of China's planned distribution system from the 1950s through the early 1990s. By 1980, the national ration framework was already showing strain — urban quotas were being quietly adjusted, and rural counties like Xuyong in southern Sichuan were managing local shortfalls through their own bureau-issued scrip rather than relying solely on centrally printed national coupons. This note is a product of that administrative patchwork.
The official seal is the only security feature, which was entirely typical for county-level issues and made local forgery a persistent, documented problem across the province.
Grain and flour ration coupons issued by county-level bureaus were a fixture of China's planned distribution system from the 1950s through the early 1990s. By 1980, the national ration framework was already showing strain — urban quotas were being quietly adjusted, and rural counties like Xuyong in southern Sichuan were managing local shortfalls through their own bureau-issued scrip rather than relying solely on centrally printed national coupons. This note is a product of that administrative patchwork.
The official seal is the only security feature, which was entirely typical for county-level issues and made local forgery a persistent, documented problem across the province.