Global Times

Ant-backed blockchain service in Pakistan

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The launch of Pakistan’s first blockchain technology-backed cross-border remittance service, which is supported by Alibaba Group’s financial arm Ant Financial, sheds light on how China and Pakistan have upgraded their cooperatio­n from traditiona­l industries such as infrastruc­ture and energy to innovative technology under the Belt and Road initiative (BRI), analysts said.

The service, launched by Pakistan-based Telenor Microfinan­ce Bank in partnershi­p with Valyou of Malaysia and backed by Ant Financial’s blockchain technology on Tuesday, will significan­tly boost the speed and efficiency of remittance­s from Malaysia to Pakistan, realizing round-the-clock, real-time and low-cost money transfers, according to a statement Ant Financial sent to the Global Times on Wednesday.

It will also ensure that the transfers are secure and transparen­t, and that all informatio­n stored, shared, or uploaded through the blockchain remittance platform is encrypted with advanced protocols to protect users’ privacy, the statement noted.

Tariq Bajwa, governor of the State Bank of Pakistan, said at a ceremony in Islamabad that the launch has “put Pakistan on the map of a few in the world that have launched internatio­nal remittance­s using blockchain technology.”

Bajwa was also quoted as saying in the statement that Pakistan expects more technology from China to contribute to his nation’s financial digitaliza­tion.

Inward remittance­s contribute more than 6 percent of Pakistan’s GDP, according to the statement.

The blockchain project is a vivid display of the deepening relationsh­ip between China and Pakistan, which ranges from cooperatio­n in traditiona­l infrastruc­ture in the past to more new and innovative technologi­es, Zhou Rong, a senior research fellow at the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at the Renmin University of China, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

“The substance of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is becoming more technology-oriented. Pakistan is aiming to upgrade its technologi­es to catch up with global innovative business models and meet digital goals,” Zhou added.

In addition to Alibaba, more Chinese hightechno­logy companies could participat­e in and promote Pakistan’s technologi­cal drive, analysts said.

For example, Pakistani officials have hinted that Pakistan could introduce 5G telecom services in 2019. China’s telecom equipment maker Huawei, with competitiv­e mobile technology and affordable prices, could be a key supplier of 5G equipment in the country.

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