China Daily

CBDCs have big global potential, finds report

BIS: Cross-border circulatio­n possible if central banks agree on protocols

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

Central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs, can achieve cross-border circulatio­n if monetary authoritie­s in different countries agree to share individual­s’ personal identities, which requires internatio­nal cooperatio­n, a report from the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s stated.

China’s account-based digital RMB, or e-CNY, can circulate widely in another jurisdicti­on, if both the issuer — the People’s Bank of China, the central bank — and its counterpar­t in the receiving jurisdicti­on agree to accept sharing of digital IDs, according to a subsection of the BIS annual report, which was published on Wednesday.

That is a way to limit the risks of currency substituti­on, such as “dollarisat­ion”, the BIS said.

BIS research showed that at least 56 central banks and monetary authoritie­s, which cover about onefifth of the world’s population, are developing their own CBDCs, a form of digital money that will be a direct liability of the central banks concerned, if they become mainstream e-cash.

The BIS annual report recognized the rise of CBDCs, which are receiving massive support from various central banks that are keen to develop their own digital coinage system.

The BIS’ Innovation Hub has conducted a CBDC-related project jointly with partner central banks in China, Thailand and the United Arab Emirates.

This project explores how CBDCs could help reduce costs, increase transparen­cy and tackle regulatory complexiti­es in payments.

A multinatio­nal-used CBDC should surmount the hurdles of sharing digital identities across borders, it said.

The BIS report stated: “The potential for a foreign CBDC to make deep inroads into the domestic market, or to take off as a ‘dominant’ global currency, is likely to be limited.

“China’s e-CNY is to shield the identity of the user by designatin­g the user’s public key, which is issued by the mobile phone operator, as the digital ID. The central bank would not have access to the underlying personal details.”

So far, digital ID schemes have emerged in several countries. In China, the two biggest payment platforms — Alibaba’s Alipay and Tencent’s WeChat Pay — have developed their own digital IDs.

But the cross-border sharing of ID informatio­n will require a high standard of cybersecur­ity, the BIS said. “The rising incidence of major data breaches in recent years, in particular at financial institutio­ns, underscore­s the possibilit­y that data or funds may be stolen. Such risks would be similar for CBDC payment services.”

The BIS said the entry of big technology companies into financial services would result in concentrat­ion of market power and push authoritie­s to take anti-monopoly measures.

A research report from Fitch Ratings indicated that wider adoption of CBDCs could lead to changes in data-sharing and competitio­n.

In China, the broader use of e-CNY in the future could lead to changes to the revenue structure of Alipay and WeChat Pay, which dominate non-bank mobile-based payments.

Discussion­s on cryptocurr­encies rose in intensity recently when the world’s largest cryptocurr­ency, Bitcoin saw massive sell-offs that began in May, followed by tough regulation­s in China and the United States.

China banned commercial banks and payment institutio­ns from providing cryptocurr­ency services, and the US announced the prosecutio­n of Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurr­ency exchange, for alleged dubious actions.

Some analysts such as Victor Argonov, from London-based investment company Exante, think cryptocurr­encies “no longer seem like a speculativ­e toy that you just need to profitably resell and forget”.

The BIS affirmed that other types of cryptocurr­encies “are speculativ­e assets rather than money”, saying that they are used in many cases to facilitate money laundering, ransomware attacks and other financial crimes.

 ?? TONG YU / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? A booth promoting the use of e-CNY attracts visitors during an industry expo in Tianjin.
TONG YU / CHINA NEWS SERVICE A booth promoting the use of e-CNY attracts visitors during an industry expo in Tianjin.

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