In a blog post to Investors, Lo indicated that the reduced cash circulation is due to the emergence of private payment providers, and the scenario potentially erodes the monetary control. He notes that such companies are having an impact on privacy, security, access, and competition. To mitigate the possible risks, the People Bank of China has been embracing blockchain (or Distributed Ledger Technology also known as DLT), hoping to leverage the system’s benefits into the traditional finance sector.
Embracing DLT despite Bitcoin ban
The economist acknowledges that China is embracing DLT despite the country’s hard stance on Bitcoin. Notably, since May this year, China has accelerated its crackdown on Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. The country has cited the ban on digital currencies like Bitcoin to manage power, climate control, financial disruption, and possible erosion of its monetary policy sovereignty. Lo maintains that with DLT, PBoC aims to use the technology’s more comprehensive applications in the field of virtual finance and financial inclusion. Notably, in China, financial institutions have already embarked on deploying DLT to automate regulatory reporting and risk management functions. Furthermore, Lo highlights that digitization comes with added advantages like reduced transaction costs alongside faster transaction speed. The country also seeks to achieve financial inclusion, especially for rural residents. Worth noting is that China has also been exploring digitization with ongoing tests on the digital yuan that is close to rolling out. [coinbase]