After eight years of guesses, discourse, and conflicting reports, China’s digital yuan CBDC made a rather low-key debut at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics on 4 February.
Though China intended to make the introduction of the digital yuan a worldwide spectacle to showcase its fintech finesse, this wasn’t to be the case due to foreign boycotts of the Beijing Olympics and COVID-19 restrictions.
Even so, the country reported some impressive stats: 261 million users who registered for a digital yuan wallet, and around $1.5 billion racked up in digital yuan transactions.
However, there is some discrepancy in the figures. Governor Yi Gang of the People’s Bank of China previously reported about 56 billion RMB or roughly $8 billion in total transactions, which is far from the 9.6 billion CNY reported by Al Jazeera.
What’s more, U.S. representatives have vocally expressed their suspicions as well, with some even warning their native athletes to reject China’s digital currency.
<p lang=«en» dir=«ltr» xml:lang=«en»>Good luck to all the @TeamUSA athletes competing in the Olympics. Word to the wise – Do. Not. Accept. Any. Digital. Yuan.— Tom Emmer (@RepTomEmmer) February 4, 2022
Pro-Bitcoin Senator Cynthia Lummis too wrote about the need for American athletes to be wary of Chinese state surveillance through the digital yuan.
The digital yuan’s introduction to the world stage comes shortly after two banks in China announced that they were phasing out banknotes and coins.
Though the two banks were private financial bodies, this move goes against Yi’s promise that cash-based services would not die out in the near future. In November 2021, the PBOC Governor had said,
“China has a vast territory, a large population and diverging regional
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