China’s central bank includes digital yuan in report on currency circulation

The Peopleโ€™s Bank of China, or PBoC, has begun including the countryโ€™s central bank digital currency, the e-CNY, in reports measuring the amount of currency in circulation.

According to a 2022 financial statistics report released on Jan. 10, the PBoC said there was 13.61 billion digital yuan โ€” roughly $2 billion at the time of publication โ€” in circulation as of Dec. 31. The currency in circulation grew at a rate of 15.3% in December 2022, with the broad money supply reported to be 266.43 trillion yuan.

The PBoC reported adding the digital yuan to its figures had not caused โ€œnotable changesโ€ to growth rates. The 13.61 billion e-CNY represented roughly 0.13% of the 10.47 trillion yuan in circulation at the end of 2022.

China, the worldโ€™s second largest economy, was one of the first to begin trialing a CBDC in select cities and regions โ€” a project that was eventually made available to visiting foreign athletes at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics in February. However, usage of the digital currently has been low, according to a former PBoC research director. Transactions totaled roughly $14 billion as of October 2022 since the e-CNY was introduced in April 2020.

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The central bank announced In September 2022 it planned to expand the deployment of the e-CNY to the provinces of Guangdong, Jiangsu, Hebei and Sichuan “at a proper time.” However, neither the PBoC nor Chinese government officials have introduced a strategy for rolling out the CBDC to the entirety of Chinaโ€™s 1.4 billion residents.