China's digital yuan wallets swell but usage lags
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[January 17, 2022] SHANGHAI
(Reuters) - China's digital currency has debuted on app stores with
fanfare, with online wallets for the electronic yuan seeing mass
adoption in the two weeks since a public launch, yet its actual use in
transactions has been far less impressive.
The People's Bank of China (PBOC) is ramping up testing of the digital
currency, dubbed e-CNY, ahead of next month's Beijing Winter Olympics.
But use of e-CNY is still limited to 10 major "pilot" cities, and
hampered by people's preference for Ant Group's Alipay and Tencent's
WeChat Pay, which dominate China's online payments.
The e-CNY is one of the first sovereign digital currencies to be
launched, putting the PBOC at the fore of a global race to develop
central bank digital currencies.
On Jan. 4, PBOC released its e-CNY wallet application on mobile phone
app stores, triggering intense public interest.
The digital wallet became the most downloaded free app on China's Apple
iOS app store on Jan. 8, staying in the spot for five consecutive days,
and has been downloaded more than 2.5 million times, according to
research consultancy Sensor Tower. Previously, e-CNY wallets could only
be opened via select banks.
Still, e-CNY use is limited to the 10 major cities where pilot schemes
are launched, such as Shanghai and Shenzhen, as well as the Winter
Olympics site, where China hopes to showcase the digital yuan's clout to
the event's foreign visitors.
Howard Mao, a university student in Shanghai, said he has downloaded the
wallet, but hardly uses the electronic money.
"There are still not many application scenarios for e-CNY in daily life,
and many merchants don't accept it," said Mao, who still relies on
Alipay and WeChat Pay.
The discrepancy between busy wallet downloads and lukewarm acceptance is
also captured by official data.
During July-October last year, the number of individual e-CNY wallets
nearly jumped seven-fold, to 140 million, equivalent to one-tenth of
China's population.
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A sign indicating digital yuan, also referred to as e-CNY, is
pictured on a vending machine at a subway station in Shanghai, China
April 21, 2021. Picture taken April 21, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song
In contrast, cumulative transaction value grew 80% to 62 billion yuan ($9.77
billion). Alipay's monthly payment transaction value averaged nearly 10 trillion
yuan, Ant disclosed in 2020.
"It takes time for people to start accepting e-CNY, given entrenched payment
habits," said G. Bin Zhao, senior economist at PwC China.
But authorities have many ways to promote mass adoption, such as prioritising
the use of e-CNY in the payment of water, electricity and medical bills, he
said.
"A small push by the government will make a big difference."
The e-CNY is currently accepted by internet giants, including JD.com, Meituan
and Trip.com, and can also be used online to buy plane tickets or pay mobile
phone bills. A Chinese central banker said in November that 1.55 million
merchants could accept payments using e-CNY wallets, including utilities and
catering.
"Digital yuan development has reached critical mass," said Zou Chuanwei, chief
economist of Wanxiang Blockchain.
Application scenarios of e-CNY, which are mostly in the retail space, will be
gradually expanded to include financial asset transactions, trade, and
cross-border payment, and "the room for innovation is huge," Zou said.
($1 = 6.3463 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Samuel Shen, Brenda Goh and Jason Xue; Editing by Vidya
Ranganathan and Ana Nicolaci da Costa)
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