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Big Hit To The US – Digital Yuan vs the US Dollar!

 

Digital Yuan vs. the US Dollar – Will the Takeover Happen?

Eswar Prasad, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a professor of Trade Policy at Cornell University, believes that, while China’s digital yuan will enhance the role of the renminbi as an international payment currency, it will most likely not impact the dollar’s status as the dominant currency.
Parsad stated his opinions in a piece published in Project Syndicate, where he said that the Chinese government should keep reforming its financial markets and remove restrictions on the capital flow, all in order to put both China’s national cross-border payments system and CBDC in the global sphere.

According to the professor, China’s national currency has made significant progress in recent years, both as a reserve currency and as a means of payment. He says that this can mostly be attributed at the expense of currencies such as the British Pound and the Euro:
Even when the IMF added renminbi to the four existing currencies in the SDR basket, and then gave it a 10.9% weighting, it was most likely the euro, the pound, as well as the Japanese yen that gave way, not the US dollar.
The People’s Bank of China still influences the renminbi exchange rate, said Prasad, who added that such policy most likely won’t change “significantly anytime soon.”

On the other hand, the professor clarified that as other developing countries are making solid trade and financial links with China, they “could start to invoice and settle their transactions directly” in their national currency, which could easily lead to the adoption of the digital yuan when it’s officially launched.
China’s Commerce Ministry made an announcement on Aug 14 that it will expand the trials of the nation’s CBDS to include Beijing, as well as Tianjin and Hebei provinces.

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Crypto Videos

Digital Yuan Taking Over As China Expands Trials To Beijing!

 

Digital Yuan Taking Over – China Expands Trials to Beijing and Other Provinces

China’s Commerce Ministry made an announcement that it will expand the trials of China’s central bank digital currency to include Beijing, as well as Hebei and Tianjin provinces.
According to the Wall Street Journal report on Aug 14, the time when this expanded pilot program will begin. However, the nation’s Ministry of Commerce said that the policy framework should be done by the end of 2020.


The expanded pilot testing will also include the Hong Kong Greater Bay area, which consists of nine cities, including Shenzhen and Guangzhou, as well as Hong Kong and Macau.
A representative from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce announced that the trials will cover much of China’s most wealthy regions. Poorer regions such as central and western China will also join the testing, though the reasoning behind this is not explained. The People’s Bank of China, which is China’s central bank, will lead the pilot.


China’s CBDC is also known as a digital currency electronic payment (DCEP for short) and is by many influential people around the world expected to be the first operational national digital currency. The People’s Bank of China tested this DCEP in mid-April as part of a transport subsidies scheme for government and enterprise workers in Suzhou, a major city in Jiangsu Province.
Earlier this month, state-run banks in China were also reported to be performing testing a digital wallet that was specifically designed for DCEP usage on a large scale.