The long-anticipated digital yuan will be piloted in more cities across the country, announced China’s ministry of commerce on  August 14.

According to the official statement, these cities include those in the northern Chinese region of Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei, eastern region of Yangtze River Delta, the “Greater Bay Area” around the Pearl River Delta, and some cities in Midwestern China.

The document states that the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) shall formulate policy safeguards. Cities like Shenzhen, Chengdu, Suzhou, Xiong’an New Area and future winter Olympic scenarios will assist in the pilot project, and then it will expand to other regions as the case may be.

On the news, digital currency-related stocks in the country surged. By midday, the digital currency sector was up 2.65%, with several stocks rising nearly 10%.

China's digital Yuan progresses
Images of China's upcoming digital yuan and the app itself leaked.

The spate of digital yuan related news over the past few months indicates that the DCEP (its official name) might be ready to come out.

Earlier this month, 8btc reported that China’s major state-run commercial banks had been conducting large-scale internal testing of the digital wallet designed for the digital yuan, which indicates the official launch of the country’s central bank digital currency is one step closer.

On August 3, the PBoC pointed out in a video conference for the second half of 2020 that the “closed trial of legal digital currency has been successfully launched” in the first half of the year, and the research and development on it will be “actively yet prudently promoted” in the second half.

In April, employees of administrative units in Xiangcheng district in Suzhou city were reportedly required to install a digital wallet to receive 50% of their transport subsidies in the new digital currency.

The digital economy is an increasingly important driver of global economic growth. The R&D and application of legal digital currency are conducive to efficiently meeting the demand of the public in the digital economy, improving the convenience, security and anti-counterfeiting level in retail payment, and boosting the development of China’s digital economy.

As early as 2014, the People’s Bank of China set up a special team to study issues regarding the framework of digital currency issuance, key technologies, circulation environment and relevant international experience. In 2017, the PBoC organized some heavyweight commercial banks and institutions to jointly develop the digital yuan. DCEP has basically completed the work of top-level design, standard formulation, functional research and development, joint testing under the premise of adhering to two-layer operation, cash (M0) substitution and controllable anonymity.

[This story was originally published on 8BTC.com, and is shared by arrangement with that site. It has been edited to conform with Decrypt's style.]

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