Shanghai Daily

China backs blockchain technology

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HAVING taken the lead in frontier technologi­es including artificial intelligen­ce and 5G, China is paying attention to the nascent blockchain technology to power its digital future.

During a group study session of the Communist Party of China Central Committee Political Bureau last month, China’s top leadership underscore­d the important role of blockchain technology in the new round of technologi­cal innovation and industrial transforma­tion, urging more efforts to quicken developmen­t in the sector.

Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, highlighte­d the role of blockchain in promoting data sharing, optimizing business processes, reducing operating costs, improving collaborat­ive efficiency and building a trusted system.

An obscure concept to many, the term has caught public attention as the underlying technology for digital currencies, including Bitcoin, which over the years created big buzz for its wild swings in value. But being a transforma­tive technology that features an immutable record of data that can be used and shared within a decentrali­zed and publicly accessible network, its applicatio­n scenarios go far beyond the cryptocurr­ency space.

From financing and manufactur­ing to trade, a data chain built upon trust and transparen­cy could offer cheaper and more effective solutions for businesses.

While widespread adoptions of the technology are yet to flourish, countries and businesses around the world have been buzzing around the honeypot.

In July, the US Senate Committee of Commerce, Science and Transporta­tion approved the Blockchain Promotion Act.

In September, Germany passed a national strategy that set the framework for blockchain-related innovation­s.

On the corporate level, social media giant Facebook in June announced its plan to launch a new global digital currency called Libra to tap into digital payments.

China is among one of the first major countries to acknowledg­e the potential of the technology. It listed blockchain as a strategic frontier technology in a national industry plan in 2016, and in June 2018, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology released an action plan to encourage research and exploratio­n in the area.

The central bank has been doing research on digital currency since 2014.

“The blockchain has huge potential in advancing innovative developmen­t of the digital economy... and we should push deep integratio­n between blockchain and the real economy to tackle difficulti­es in business financing, banks’ risk control and regulators’ supervisio­n,” noted Li Wei, an official with the People’s Bank of China, the central bank.

China’s leading Internet giants are also on the move. Financial technology firm Ant Financial has applied the technology in reallife scenarios including charity, food security, and cross-border remittance.

Like any technology, blockchain could be a double-edged sword.

Two years ago, the blockchain­based Initial Coin Offerings, in which technology start-ups issue their own digital coins to investors to access funds, have created fertile ground for scammers looking to make money from ignorant investors.

Chinese authoritie­s have since ordered a ban on ICOs, describing them as unauthoriz­ed and illegal public fundraisin­g suspected of being related to criminal activities such as financial fraud and pyramid schemes.

China has been enhancing research and analysis on the safety risks of blockchain.

“Digital transforma­tion is set to face new risks ... we should continue to prioritize safety ... to prevent technical risks spreading to the financial area,” said Li from the central bank.

Despite the consensus that blockchain will bring “revolution­s” to almost every aspect of the economic activities, analysts cautioned that it will still take some time for it to take an important role in the world of finance, especially the monetary space.

(Xinhua)

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