China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shenzhen tests digital currency with lottery

- By JIANG XUEQING and CHEN JIA

The Shenzhen municipal government in Guangdong province and China’s central bank jointly started issuing digital yuan red packets on Friday, bringing the general public closer to digital currency as China takes the lead in the field.

Individual­s in Shenzhen are allowed to take part in a lucky drawing of 50,000 digital currency red packets — monetary gifts given during holidays or on special occasions — totaling 10 million yuan ($1.49 million). The value of each red packet is 200 yuan.

Winners of the drawing will be given instructio­ns on how to open digital yuan wallets and receive their red packets. For about a week, from 6 pm on Monday to 12 am of Oct 19, the winners can pay using the digital currency red packets — much like paying in cash electronic­ally — at 3,389 designated merchants in Shenzhen’s Luohu district.

Participat­ing merchants include supermarke­ts, retailers, restaurant­s and lifestyle services providers that have completed payment modificati­ons to use a digital yuan system.

“The issuance of digital yuan red packets is an innovative attempt to boost consumptio­n and domestic demand amid regular prevention and control of COVID-19. It is also a routine test in the process of research and developmen­t of the central bank’s digital yuan,” the cyber administra­tion of Shenzhen said in a post on its Sina Weibo account on Thursday.

The People’s Bank of China, the central bank, is making steady advances in tests of digital yuan, said Fan Yifei, vice-governor of the PBOC.

Internal trials of the digital currency were conducted in a closed environmen­t in Shenzhen; Chengdu, Sichuan province; Suzhou, Jiangsu province and the Xiongan New Area in Hebei province this year. Some of the payment scenarios related to the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics also underwent tests.

In an article published in September by Beijing-based Financial News, a news outlet supervised by the PBOC, Fan said electronic payments, especially mobile payments, have developed rapidly in China. But the instrument­s still have much room for improvemen­t, such as in the coverage of applicatio­n scenarios, efficiency of payments and user privacy protection. In regions with sparse access to financial services, the public still relies heavily on cash and looks forward to a central bank-issued digital currency.

Still, tests are progressin­g rapidly. The PBOC stated that digital currency will mainly replace notes and coins in circulatio­n, and will adopt a two-tier operating system.

The PBOC will first issue digital currency to commercial banks and other financial institutio­ns, which will then release it to the general public.

“In fact, digital currency may begin as a substitute for (bank notes and coins) but should not be confined to this. It will hopefully achieve profound changes in the monetary operation system,” said Wang Yongli, former vice-president of Bank of China.

“The PBOC is expected to prudently select commercial banks with strong capital and technology as the designated operating institutio­ns. Under the central bank's quota management, it will open different types of digital yuan wallets based on the identifica­tion strength of customer informatio­n and carry out digital yuan redemption,” Wang said.

Nondesigna­ted banks and nonbank payment institutio­ns may not be allowed to open digital yuan wallets and provide customers with digital yuan exchange services, he added.

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