420,000+ Merchants in Changsha, China Accept CDBC Pay – Is Digital Yuan Adoption on the Rise?
420,000+ Merchants in Changsha, China Accept CDBC Pay – Is Digital Yuan Adoption on the Rise?
More than 420,000 merchants in Changsha, China, now accept payments in the digital yuan, China’s central bank digital currency (CBDC).
The city is located in Hunan Province and was added to the pilot in April 2021.
In February this year, Changsha authorities said that 300,000 merchants in the city were processing digital yuan payments.
But the same authorities now say that figure has leaped up above the 420,000 mark, the Changsha Evening News reported (via the Hunan Daily).
Changsha claimed that this figure comprised bricks-and-mortar businesses only.
The city said that it did not take online vendors into account.
The city stated that 22 million personal CBDC wallets have been opened in the city since the pilot began.
In addition, 800,000 “public” wallets have been opened for firms and government organs located in Changsha.
The city added that a total of 62 million transactions have been made since the pilot began.
Changsha said that the total value of these transactions was over $1.4 billion.
Located in central China, the city is one of the nation’s most populous.
Over 10 million people live in the city itself and many more reside in the surrounding Greater Changsha Metropolitan Region.
CBDC on the Rise in China: Digital Yuan Gaining Ground?
According to the data released by the central People’s Bank of China (PBoC), the “popularity” of mobile payments reached the 90% mark last year.
The PBoC has begun cross-border pilots with Hong Kong and Macau, which will allow Beijing to test the CBDC in international markets.
Although Hong Kong is officially part of China, it retains a separate economic system.
This system is linked to Western and other Asian economies.
Macau also has a separate currency and economic system.
Some Hong Kong-based securities firms have recently suggested that a digital yuan link with Mainland China could allow entities based in Chinese cities to finance initial public offerings (IPOs).
This could well allow the digital yuan to find usage cases in “international markets,” as the PBoC continues to hunt for new CBDC breakthroughs.