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Digital Yuan Will Revolutionize Chinese Retail Payments – Central Bank _
Per Yicai, Mu Changchun, Head of the Digital Currency Research Institute at the People’s Bank of China (PBoC), made the comments at the China International Financial Annual Forum this week.
Mu said it would be important to ensure that the digital yuan was accepted “in all retail payment scenarios” in Mainland China.
He also called on the PBoC’s banking and e-pay provider partners to streamline their QR code technical protocols.
At present, wallets are hosted by the PBoC or a number of mainly state-run banks.
The private-sector e-pay powerhouses WeChat Pay and Alipay have also added e-CNY functionality to their apps.
But all of these partners have thus far sought to integrate e-CNY payment options with their own conventional pay interfaces – rather than with one another’s offerings.
This fact, Mu suggested, means that merchants can face IT-related adoption issues with their POS devices.
The South China Morning Post quoted Andrew Fei, a partner at the Hong Kong law firm King & Wood Mallesons, as explaining:
China’s Digital Yuan: New Adoption Drive?
Mu added that banking and e-pay partners also needed to perform a series of upgrades to help drive further CBDC adoption efforts in the retail payments sector.
But analysts have claimed that Mu’s comments were actually aimed at retailers, not partner financial institutions.
Jie Hu, a Professor at the Shanghai Jiao Tong University’s Advanced Institute of Finance, opined:
But Mu’s wider goal is likely a radical reduction in China’s dependence on cash, or even a total elimination of analog forms of currency.
He said:
The “digital economy” has become a buzzword in Chinese political circles in recent years, and the PBoC is determined to lead the world in CBDC and “cashless society” drives.
Other Asian nations, such as nearby South Korea, have also launched IT-powered “cashless society” drives of their own.
The state-run media outlet Xinhua last month published an interview with Kent Matthews, a Professor of Banking and Finance at the UK’s Cardiff University.
In the interview, Matthews stated that the proportion of cash in terms of the total amount of yuan in circulation had “dropped to 3.7%” and “is continuing to fall.”
Matthews said that China was “on track to becoming the world’s top country for cash-free transactions,” although he claimed it would “be impossible for any government to legislate cash away.”
Mu further claimed that existing inter-bank payment and clearing s can still “meet the needs of China’s economic development.”
He said that there was “no need to replace” existing networks with the central bank’s digital currency .
The PBoC chief claimed that conventional and CBDC networks “can be fully interoperable and seamlessly connected.”
Mu concluded that CBDC smart contracts could be used to boost the efficiency of Chinese wholesale payments.