China Daily (Hong Kong)

Digital currency experts ponder cross-border payments, settlement­s

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

The major policy challenge that all countries are facing is to sustain monetary and financial stability when they are improving the efficiency of the cross-border payment and settlement services.”

Cross-border payments of the digital renminbi have never been ignored by central bank officials and financial regulators since the innovation started, although they still need a long-term view to allow transactio­ns on various electronic systems across jurisdicti­ons, monetary experts said.

Theoretica­lly, the usage of digital currency has the potential to change the current global crossborde­r payment system, which is based on a complicate­d network of agent banks and clearing banks located in different regions and time zones, said He Dong, deputy director of the monetary and capital markets department of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Chinese scholars recently focused more on designing a cross-border payment and settlement system for the digital renminbi, as the monetary authoritie­s have accelerate­d trials and expanded usage of the new money called DC/EP (which stands for digital currency/electronic payment).

A research paper from the Center for Internatio­nal Finance and Economics Research of Tsinghua University, said the cross-border use of digital yuan could help reduce reliance on the existing US-dollar denominate­d payment system, which may threaten China’s financial security if Sino-US frictions escalate.

Right from the initial stage of the digital currency experiment, market observers have predicted that the launch of the digital renminbi will accelerate Chinese yuan’s internatio­nalization, challengin­g the status of the US dollar as the world’s reserve currency.

“We hope that foreign companies that have business with Chinese firms will use digital renminbi for cross-border payments. But a key issue is how to set the exchange rate of digital yuan against other currencies. The exchange rate should be attractive for users, while it can prevent arbitrage activities of speculativ­e capital,” said Ju Jiandong, a professor of finance at Tsinghua’s CIFER.

Big companies, especially the high-tech ones, should be the “super nodes” of the cross-border digital currency payment network, and the central bank should play the role of a supervisor and the guardian of digital currency’s floating, to ensure transactio­ns are smooth if some countries impose financial sanctions under extreme circumstan­ces, Ju said.

China’s telecommun­ications giant Huawei, and internet and e-commerce behemoth Alibaba Group, have joined the designing work for the cross-border payment network of China’s digital currency, according to people familiar with the matter.

But the process will be long and

He Dong, deputy director of the monetary and capital markets department of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund

complicate­d, which also requires effective communicat­ions among major central banks and betterbala­nced foreign exchange regimes in different countries, experts said.

Zhou Xiaochuan, former governor of the PBOC, said: “Successful cross-border payments need full respect for currency sovereignt­ies of emerging markets and developing countries, their various exchange rate regimes and convertibi­lity regulation­s, as well as considerat­ions behind their macro-prudential management policies.”

However, the structure of the internatio­nal currency system could not be easily changed by simply issuing central bankbacked digital currencies, as the issue also involves complicate­d aspects like the economic scale of the issuing country, trade volume, security and liquidity of the currency and geopolitic­s, said He of the IMF.

But the usage of digital currency will save time during cross-border transactio­ns, simplify payment chains and improve transparen­cy, He said.

“The major policy challenge that all countries are facing is to sustain monetary and financial stability when they are improving the efficiency of the cross-border payment and settlement services. It also requires close cooperatio­n between central banks and support from the internatio­nal society.”

He suggested building a “currency bridge” to promote the interopera­bility of digital currencies designed by different countries, and facilitate the foreign exchange market denominate­d by automated trading.

Chinese central bank officials have confirmed that foreigners and companies from overseas can hold the digital renminbi even without opening an account in Chinese banks, which means a more convenient way for crossborde­r payments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China