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Chinese Ex-Banker Says Digital Currency Should Replace Fiat Money
A former vice president of the Bank of China has argued digital currency should replace fiat in the nation's financial systems.
Updated Sep 14, 2021, 9:39 a.m. Published Aug 4, 2020, 10:27 a.m.

A former vice president of a top Chinese bank said digital currency should replace fiat in the nation's financial systems.
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- Yongli Wang, previously of the Bank of China, said in a WeChat post that wide use of digital currencies would encourage monetary reform, as reported by media outlet The Global Times on Sunday.
- Wang, now a director of the Haixia Blockchain Research Institute, also said China would use digital currency as a substitute for cash in circulation initially, but that could impact its market competitiveness if confined solely to that role.
- Digital currencies, he said, could help to bolster liquidity in an economy, while placing limits on excessive issuance of physical cash.
- Wang added that preventing the printing of too much cash would help maintain monetary and financial stability.
- One way forward, he suggested, would be to provide exclusive "basic accounts" on the central bank's digital currency platform for all social entities, according to the report.
- Bank of China is one of the nation's four biggest state-owned commercial banks.
- The former VP's comments come at a time when China's biggest banks and other commercial entities have begun trialing the pilot of the central bank's Digital Currency Electronic Payment (DC/EP) system.
- The digital currency, often dubbed the digital yuan, is designed to facilitate the replacement of all the nation's cash in circulation in the coming decade.
See also: China to Test Digital Yuan on Tencent-Backed Food Delivery Platform
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