We reexamine the behavior of money growth, inflation, and real money balanc
es in post-World War II Taiwan, Our results suggest that the importance of
the June 1949 reform package has been overstated. The empirical work reveal
s an extended period of instability that begins several months prior to the
June 1949 announcements and continues until early 1950. This implies that
stabilization was achieved only gradually. We also point to the importance
of two high-interest deposit programs - introduced in May 1949 and March 19
50 - in helping account for the Taiwanese authorities' ability to end the i
nflationary spiral.