<P> Another explanation of the phrase's origin is that in the 19th century the price for tea in England was the highest when the first ship with the newly harvested tea from the tightly controlled Chinese markets came in . So for the ship owners it was important to be as fast as possible back to England with the load, otherwise the cost of the passage might not be recovered from the sale of the tea . Thus there were real races (the tea clipper races) where the sail ships managed to travel the whole distance from China to England in about 80 to 90 days . </P> <P> The difference in prices from the first load to the later ones was so high that the original price which was paid for the tea in China was quite unimportant . So the "price of tea in China" was something that really didn't matter for the ship owners . They had to have the tea in England as fast as possible . </P> <P> A related expression in Hebrew can be found in a commentary on the Biblical commandment of the septennial sabbatical year . Leviticus 25: 1 specifically states that God spoke to Moses on Mount Sinai; while this was a common location for God to speak to Moses, the text's explicit reference to it is very rare . Accordingly, Rashi's commentary begins with the question "What is the connection between Shmita and Mount Sinai?" (? מה עניין שמיטה אצל הר סיני) The question has since taken on a general meaning equivalent to that of the "price of tea in China" expression . </P>

Where did the saying what does that have to do with the price of tea in china come from