Chinese state-owned banks are set to join efforts to integrate the nation’s central bank digital currency (CBDC), the digital yuan, with government-issued social security cards.
Late last month, the Chinese Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security said it wanted to “explore and promote” ways to “add digital yuan payment functions” to the cards.
The plastic cards are used as a form of identification in banks and government offices.
Some already have smartcard functionality.
But Beijing is keen to issue new, upgraded “third-generation” cards that will let citizens, particularly the elderly and those living in rural areas, make digital yuan payments with their cards.
Smartphone ownership figures are relatively low among older and rural populations.
Many individuals in these demographics are also unbanked.
Per the Economic Daily (via Xinhua), a number of “commercial banks” have “begun to explore” the notion of adding digital yuan functionality to new social security cards.
These include the Bank of China, one of the country’s biggest state-run commercial banks.
Banks, such as the Bank of China, were given permission to issue social security cards with bank card-like functions back in 2018.
But the Bank of China is now working on a “third-generation” solution that will involve issuing cards that can double as digital yuan wallets.
Li Xin, the Chief Business Manager of the bank’s Digital Currency Office, said that the solution involves not only “physical cards,” but also “bracelets, portable tags, and more.”
The bank also plans to expand the usage scenarios of the new “wallet cards” to payments and micropayments.
The cards, fobs, or wearable “wallets” will allow citizens to pay their bills, pay on public transport, settle medical
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