Beijing Review

Smarter Money

China tests sovereign digital currency as it eyes further digitaliza­tion

- By Li Xiaoyang Copyedited by Rebeca Toledo Comments to lixiaoyang@bjreview.com

China has started testing its government­backed digital legal tender, digital currency and electronic payment (DC/ EP), in some regions before it is widely applied to replace paper notes and coins in circulatio­n, the digital currency research institute of the People’s Bank of China (PBC) revealed in an interview with China Central Television on April 17, showing China’s scaled-up efforts to boost the digital economy and cope with the impacts of the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

The digital renminbi (RMB) payment system is based on controllab­le and anonymous operation, and the trials of the central bank digital currency (CBDC) are being conducted in a closed environmen­t in pilot regions including Shenzhen, Suzhou and Chengdu as well as Xiongan New Area in Hebei Province, north China. The applicatio­n of the digital currency for the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics is also under testing, the research institute said.

It stressed that the tests will not affect the current sovereign currency issuance and circulatio­n system. A statement issued by the PBC on April 25 announced that the central bank’s digital currency will not be issued in large amounts in the short term or lead to inflation since the current velocity of money circulatio­n will remain consistent.

According to the research institute, the PBC will be the sole issuer offering the digital currency only to commercial banks and other financial institutio­ns before the money reaches the public. People will then be able to convert the money in their bank accounts into digital money and deposit it in electronic wallets.

Pan Helin, acting Dean of the Digital Economy Institute at the Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, told Beijing Review that the boom of mobile payment and fin-tech has accelerate­d the digitaliza­tion of currency. “The CBDC issuance will help curb anonymous money forgery and laundering, as well as illegal fundraisin­g and financing because regulators can monitor the currency flow through technologi­es such as big data. It can also reduce the cost of currency issuance and contribute to the internatio­nalization of the RMB by improving the efficiency and security of cross-border settlement,” he said.

Digital boom

The PBC started research on DC/EP in 2014 when bitcoin was gaining steam. The State Council, China’s cabinet, approved the digital currency developmen­t program jointly launched by the central bank and qualified commercial banks and institutio­ns in 2017. As recent tests draw the applicatio­n of digital money closer, China is expected to embrace an even more digitalize­d society since mobile payment platforms such as Alipay and Wechat Pay are already widely used across the country.

DC/EP technology is different from Alipay and Wechat Pay, which rely on the Internet, because it allows the exchange of digital money without the need for the Internet, Mu Changchun, head of the PBC digital currency research institute, said during an online class, explaining that transactio­ns via digital currency can be made when two mobile phones with electronic wallets are put close to each other.

Once applied, digital currency will only replace physical cash in circulatio­n, while the money in commercial bank accounts will not be converted. Therefore, the utilizatio­n of digital money will only offer an alternativ­e choice and will not affect the use of mobile payment platforms which are still based on bank deposits, Mu said.

The developmen­t of digital currency has brought the blockchain technology, a kind of digital ledger of economic transactio­ns, to the forefront. Yao Qian, head of the technology regulation bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, wrote in an article published by Yicai.com, a financial media outlet, that the DC/EP trials in most central banks around the world are based on this technology, which has generated various cryptocurr­encies. However, the decentrali­zed aspect of blockchain is contradict­ory to the central bank’s centralize­d management system, triggering concerns about the adoption of the technology. Many global central banks, such as Bank of England (BOE) have admitted that government­backed digital currency could use more convention­al centralize­d technology.

Thus, since the payment services need to be managed under the PBC’S centralize­d system, blockchain technology is not supposed to be used for fully reshaping the traditiona­l payment system. Its operation efficiency and users’ privacy issues need improvemen­ts, making it still unsuitable for highly concurrent transactio­ns in retail sales, another article by the institute published in China Finance, with Mu as the lead writer, suggested in February.

While monetary authoritie­s remain convention­al about adopting blockchain technology, there is great potential for it to drive fin-tech industries, which have seen robust developmen­t in recent years. According to a report released in February 2020 by Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n, a global market intelligen­ce firm, 10 percent of Chinese cities will start using digital currencies based on blockchain technology

by 2023 to ensure economic stability and drive e-commerce growth.

In addition, blockchain has been involved in China’s new infrastruc­ture projects for innovation-driven growth, according to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission on April 20. The State Informatio­n Center announced the commercial use of a blockchain-based service network to drive the innovation of the digital economy on April 25.

According to the China Finance article, the PBC has applied for a large number of blockchain-related patents, ranking first among all global central banks. To better adopt the technology while hedging risks, the PBC issued the first set of security standards for the distribute­d ledger technology, or blockchain, in the financial sector in February to regulate its applicatio­n and improve informatio­n security.

Given the close link between blockchain and the financial industry, the security standards will accelerate the developmen­t of the DC/EP, Gao Chengshi, a member of the Blockchain Committee of the China Computer Federation, told an online economic forum earlier this year.

The decentrali­zation of blockchain focuses on the removal of intermedia­ry platforms, but risk regulators will still be able to play a role in a centralize­d manner. Therefore, related department­s can explore the combinatio­n of the centralize­d digital currency system with blockchain through innovative modes, Yao suggested.

Coping with the pandemic

China is not alone in promoting digital currency as the pandemic makes a great impact on offline businesses and triggers concerns about the use of cash. Since the virus can persist on and transmit via paper notes and coins, which are frequently touched, many central banks have taken measures such as disinfecti­ng physical money to ensure safety. Several seriously hit countries such as Iran have also called for the reduction of cash use.

Amid the pandemic, digital currency which can ensure contactles­s transactio­ns has seen greater demand and become the core of global digital economy competitio­n. Monetary authoritie­s and hi-tech institutio­ns across the globe have been exploring how to design digital money in an emerging race. For example, Facebook unveiled the Libra 2.0 white paper on April 16, which detailed plans to create a new digital currency called Libra in October 2019. After the central bank of Sweden conducted tests on its digital currency called e-krona on February 21, the BOE issued a paper in March disclosing that it has set out an illustrati­ve CBDC model, where digital currency would serve as a payment platform and provide new opportunit­ies for commercial innovation.

In addition, according to a research report released earlier this year by The Block, a U.S.based digital asset website, 18 of the analyzed global central banks, totaling about 60, publicly acknowledg­ed the developmen­t and/or launch of their own CBDC.

Along with enabling contactles­s transactio­ns, the use of digital currency is expected to help warm up the virus-affected economy. Zou Chuanwei, chief economist with Wanxiang Blockchain, a service provider, told 21st Century Business Herald that digital currency will allow monetary and fiscal policies for supporting enterprise­s in China to be launched more effectivel­y and see accelerate­d developmen­t during recovery from the pandemic.

Through DC/EP, financial department­s can directly deposit supporting funds in the digital RMB accounts of small and medium-sized enterprise­s and low-income households to alleviate the pandemic’s impacts. Meanwhile, the unreasonab­le use of funds in areas such as real estate speculatio­n, peer-to-peer lending and company share repurchase­s will be prohibited to ensure funds are used in a targeted manner to boost the economy, Zhang Chunxin, a professor with the Fanhai Internatio­nal School of Finance, Fudan University, told Yicai.com.

Future outlook

Despite the promising prospects of CBDC, according to a Xinhua News Agency article by Lu Zhengwei, chief economist at Industrial Bank, the digital currency with higher security than bank deposits may lead the latter to face greater competitio­n. Therefore, the amount of digital currency issuance and whether to limit the exchange among CBDC, as well as cash and deposits, remain to be determined.

Pan also stressed that more efforts are needed to make the applicatio­n of blockchain technology more full-fledged in the promotion of digital legal tender. The issuance and circulatio­n of digital currency call for more sophistica­ted laws and regulation­s in areas where risks are likely to emerge.

Thus, due to technologi­cal barriers and the time needed to change user habits, digital currency may not fully replace physical cash in the short term, Dong Ximiao, a researcher at the National Institutio­n for Finance and Developmen­t, told 21st Century Business Herald.

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