China’s Central Bank Completes Top-Layer Design and Joint Tests of Planned CBDC

Published at: Jan. 10, 2020

The central bank of China has completed the top-layer design and joint testing of its soon-to-be-released central bank digital currency (CBDC).

As domestic news outlet Sina reported on Jan. 10, People’s Bank of China (PBoC) accomplished the top-layer design of the planned digital yuan, developed relevant standards, carried out research and development and a joint testing of the CBDC.

The bank set forth the latest developments in a dedicated article, also highlighting plans to improve cybersecurity of the financial industry network and formulate rules for the accreditation of critical information infrastructure.

First real-world tests

Reports about China planning to conduct the first real-world test of its CBDC appeared in early December of last year, with the initial pilot for the CBDC set for the city of Shenzhen before the end of 2019, and may possibly include the city of Suzhou.

Within the tests, China’s CBDC was expected to go beyond the central bank system and enter service scenarios such as transportation, education and medical treatment, among others.

Earlier this month, PBoC reported smooth progress with the digital yuan.

Encryption standards of the planned CBDC

As Cointelegraph reported in a dedicated analysis piece, China’s law governing cryptographic password management came into power, with the objective of setting standards for the application of cryptography and the management of passwords. Sale Lilly, China policy analyst and professor of blockchain technologies at the Rand Corporation, told Cointelegraph that the law “is highly complementary to many of the efforts and tasks required to roll out a CBDC.”

Lilly noted that the CBDC-related progress would depend on the stringency of the “Core” and “Common” encryption levels, and further commented:

“If China’s experience in trying to unify government cryptographic standards is anything like the U.S. Military’s experience, higher standards of encryption and trust scale users at a slower rate, so onboarding oracles and trusted agents for a private or permissioned access CBDC blockchain implies a natural trade-off between key security and speed of onboarding digital economy participants; banks, vendors, and a slew of Chinese government entities in tax and finance roles.”

Tags
Related Posts
Asian CBDC projects: What are they doing now?
The rapid growth of mainstream attention toward cryptocurrencies has forced the hands of numerous governments to create their digital alternatives. Over the past few years, interest from various jurisdictions has been pointed towards central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) — digital versions of government-issued fiat. Given their capacity to use blockchain technology to facilitate a simplified fiscal policy — not to mention calibrate privacy features and even provide cross-border banking services to the unbanked — CBDCs continue to gain even more attention from various governments worldwide. Already, surveys show more than 80% of central banks are researching CBDCs, with some working …
Adoption / Oct. 16, 2021
Japanese Official Calls for Urgent Development of Digital Yen to Counter China
Another Japanese lawmaker has publicly called for the swift development of the digital yen. The head of the banking and finance systems research commission at Japan's Liberal Democratic Party, Kozo Yamamoto, said today that the country should create a digital yen in two to three years. Reuters reported on Feb. 10 that Yamamoto said that plans for its central bank digital currency (CBDC) should be included in the government’s mid-year policy guidelines. He explained that digital currencies could quickly spread in emerging economies and help China — who is working on a CBDC — advance its digital hegemony. Because of …
Blockchain / Feb. 10, 2020
UK will likely need to issue a digital currency, says BoE deputy governor
The Bank of England's deputy governor Jon Cunliffe has argued that a sea change in the issuance and circulation of public and private monies could make general access to a digital form of central bank money crucial for ensuring financial stability in future. In a speech at the OMFIF Digital Money Institute in London, Cunliffe reflected on past, present and future trends in the widespread use of private money issued by commercial banks, noting that the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated existing trends away from public to private money for everyday payments. About 70% of respondents to a recent Bank of …
Adoption / May 14, 2021
China and UK’s Planned Digital Currencies Appear to Have Little in Common
As major central bank digital currency (CBDC) projects develop apace, it is becoming clear that not all digital coins will look, or even function the same way. A recent analysis by Chinese financial media group InterChain Pulse reveals that two of the most visible such projects — those of the Bank of England (BoE) and the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) — may be more different than they are alike. InterChain Pulse cited BoE’s discussion paper released earlier this month, where the financial institution seriously weighed the pros and cons of issuing a CBDC denominated in pounds sterling. InterChain compared …
Technology / March 27, 2020
Expert: US Should Cut Crypto Firms Some Slack to Compete With China
Fintech and regulation experts have said the United States needs to wake up to China’s proactive pursuit of a central bank digital currency. A Fortune report published on Nov. 1 pointed to the fact that digital currency looks poised to play an increasingly important role in the standoff between the two superpowers. China making “very large macros plays” As Mike Wasyl — managing partner at DeerCreek, a fintech-focused corporate strategy firm that works across Asia-Pacific and the U.S. — told Fortune: "China is making these very large macro plays. They want to maintain control and be seen as leaders and …
Adoption / Nov. 1, 2019