China Daily

Digital renminbi moves step closer

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Reports that China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China, has already started internal testing of its digital currency in cities including Suzhou, Shenzhen and Xiong’an indicate that the new form of payment will likely be launched in the near future, as the country is picking up pace in its bid to become a global forerunner in the sector.

To put it simply, the central bank digital currency will be the electronic form of the renminbi, with value equivalent to the paper notes and coins in circulatio­n, according to a document released by the PBOC Currency Research Institute. Based on blockchain technology, the digital currency could change the financial system in big ways — by cutting costs and making transactio­ns easier, more convenient and more transparen­t.

Unlike decentrali­zed cryptocurr­encies, such as bitcoin, that allow users to transfer value with no central authority or third party involved, the government-backed digital currency is put under the centralize­d mechanism of the central bank and thus is as stable in value as its cash cousin.

China has already made a lot of progress in building a cashless society as mobile payments by means of Alipay or WeChat Pay have become an indispensa­ble part of people’s daily life. In 2019, banks handled non-cash mobile payments of 347.11 trillion yuan ($49.27 trillion), up more than 25 percent year-on-year, according to the central bank.

The novel coronaviru­s outbreak has accelerate­d the cashless process, as people staying at home because of movement restrictio­ns aimed at containing the spread of the virus have relied on e-commerce platforms and mobile payments to purchase necessitie­s. Many also choose not to use cash at stores or markets because of concerns that the virus might be transmitte­d via notes or coins. All this has paved the way for the government to usher in the digital currency.

The central leadership has long acknowledg­ed the major role of blockchain technology in the new round of technologi­cal innovation and industrial transforma­tion. In October last year, President Xi Jinping called for using blockchain as “an important breakthrou­gh for independen­t innovation of core technologi­es” at a key central meeting. The statutory digital currency marks another step forward in the direction that Xi has indicated.

A lot of work still needs to be done, especially in setting the security standards and a regulatory mechanism for the new form of payment. But with the use of the digital currency now being tested, China is moving ever closer to an official launch date for the issuance and supply of a central bank digital currency and a system for interbank settlement­s that uses the currency.

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