The Pak Banker

Chinese central bank urges faster digital yuan roll-out

- BEIJING -APP

China should accelerate its efforts to launch a sovereign digital currency, elevating it as an important part of an "independen­t" financial infrastruc­ture in the digital era, a top Chinese central bank official has said.

The comments by Chen Yulu, deputy governor of the People's Bank of China (PBOC), came months after the country's top leadership introduced a new inward-facing economic strategy - dual circulatio­n - to support future growth by relying more on domestic demand, and to better insulate itself amid rising geopolitic­al tensions, particular­ly with the United States.

The comments also came as other major central banks have made inroads on the developmen­t of their own sovereign digital currencies.

"We must serve dual circulatio­n with fintech-led innovation­s," Chen said in an article published in China Finance magazine, which is run by the PBOC. "We must build an independen­t and highqualit­y financial infrastruc­ture … quicken the pace of research and developmen­t of the central bank digital currency, and ensure that pilot tests show [the digital currency] is controllab­le and safeguards the security of payments."

Last week, the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank, Sweden's Riksbank, the Swiss National Bank and the US Federal Reserve jointly issued a report with the Bank for Internatio­nal

Settlement­s discussing potential collaborat­ion on sovereign currencies in their electronic forms to avoid unintended barriers in transferri­ng them internatio­nally.

China was not a participan­t in formulatin­g the report. The Bank of Japan said on Friday that it plans to start testing a central bank digital currency from next year, while the European Central Bank was expected to begin public consultati­on on Monday to create a digital euro for the 19-nation currency club.

The PBOC has not yet announced any internatio­nal cooperatio­n on digital currencies. However, in June last year, then Internatio­nal Monetary Fund managing director Christine Lagarde hinted at the possible developmen­t of an electronic version of the organisati­on's special drawing rights mechanism to replace existing reserve currencies. She has since become president of the European Central Bank.

"Growing signs show that China will launch the digital currency soon. It may expand [trials] to more regions [of China] or add more applicatio­n scenarios, but the direction is clear," said Raymond Yeung, chief Greater China economist with ANZ Bank. "Any [internatio­nal] collaborat­ion without [the participat­ion of] China, given its economic size and applicatio­n experience, would be a loss to the internatio­nal community," he added.

China is the clear front runner in developing a digital currency, having started its research in 2014 and chartering an institutio­n in 2017 dedicated to the effort. The pace of developmen­t accelerate­d after internet giant Facebook outlined plans for its Libra digital token project and a related blockchain-based financial infrastruc­ture project last year, though Facebook quickly ran into problems with financial regulators in major economies.

The PBOC is already running tests involving its Digital Currency Electronic Payment (DCEP) system in four cities - Suzhou, Xiongan, Shenzhen and Chengdu - as well as at sites for the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics.

The government has made it clear that the goals of DCEP are to replace cash, maintain government control over the currency and create as many small retail applicatio­n scenarios as possible. Previously disclosed applicatio­ns include a meal allowance for public servants in Suzhou and a ride-hailing service in Xiongan.

Speaking at the Sibos banking and financial conference earlier this month, deputy central bank governor Fan Yifei said that 3.13 million transactio­ns, totalling 1.1 billion yuan (US$164.3 million), have been processed so far with the digital currency. The pilot programmes involved more than 6,700 use cases as of late August for transactio­ns ranging from bill payments and public transport to government services.

On Monday, Shenzhen city, just across the mainland border from Hong Kong, distribute­d by lottery 50,000 digital "red packets" gift envelopes traditiona­lly given out during holidays and special occasions with each containing 200 yuan (US$30), in an effort to boost consumptio­n and test the nascent technology.

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-APP ?? Ambassador of Pakistan to Afghanista­n, Mansoor Khan calls on Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, Leader of Hisb-e-Islami in Kabul. They discussed issues of mutual interest.
KABUL -APP Ambassador of Pakistan to Afghanista­n, Mansoor Khan calls on Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, Leader of Hisb-e-Islami in Kabul. They discussed issues of mutual interest.

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