China Daily

Pilot programs for national digital currency rollout likely this year

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

Monetary authoritie­s will need to find answers to issues beyond the basic design architectu­re, including the regulatory framework and the competitio­n relationsh­ip with the existing electronic payment tools, ahead of the official debut of the national digital currency in China, experts said on Monday.

If China launches its digital currency as a legal tender, at the present stage, it may have some “transition­al features”, which means maintainin­g the existing market operation mechanism and monetary policy transmissi­on system, Li Lihui, former president of the Bank of China, said at a seminar hosted by

Peking University’s National School of Developmen­t on Monday.

The government-backed digital currency will “gradually” replace the traditiona­l currency and payment instrument­s. Before that, there is no need to rebuild financial infrastruc­ture or currency issuance and management structure, which can save investment and is conducive to risk management and control, said Li.

Central bank officials called the sovereign digital currency the digital currency and electronic payment, or DC/EP. The latest informatio­n from the central bank was that some pilot areas will be chosen for the DC/EP experiment­s.

Analysts said that the pilot program for the Chinese sovereign digital currency in select regions may happen this year, although some legal issues still need to be sorted out, such as whether the basic laws need to be revised.

According to Sun Tianqi, chief accountant of the State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange, it is still not clear on how the DC/EP would be regulated. When it comes to the issue of cross-border usage of digital sovereign currency, the global regulatory environmen­t is more complicate­d. More issues need to be figured out, including internatio­nal regulatory coordinati­on, before the launch of the digital currency.

Huang Zhen, director of the Institute of Financial Law of Central University of Finance and Economics, said that for the pilot DC/EP programs, the regulatory sandbox can be introduced to test the digital currency ecosystem within a limited context, while the experiment­al process can be supervised by regulators.

“China needs to speed up the developmen­t of digital currency supervisio­n and sovereign digital currency issuance mechanism,” said Li, who is also head of the blockchain research working group at the National Internet Finance Associatio­n of China.

“As digital currency will be at the core of the future global digital economy competitio­n, it is necessary to accelerate the research of the feasible paths of China-led global digital currency,” he said.

How the DC/EP will compete with the existing electronic payment methods is another issue that needs to be studied, analysts said, as the new central bank digital currency may change the current business structure of the payment sector.

Yang Tao, deputy director of the National Institutio­n for Finance and Developmen­t, a Chinese financial think tank, said that at the current stage, the DC/EP could be a diversifie­d complement of third-party electronic payment platforms.

Unlike WeChat or Alipay, the two largest mobile payment platforms in China, the DC/EP transactio­n can be offline and separated from bank accounts, which are also its “advantages” over the two popular third-party payment platforms. Whether the DC/ EP can replace WeChat and Alipay will be finally determined by the market, depending on its convenienc­e, usage cost and public acceptance, said Li.

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