Residents of 3 Chinese cities paying taxes and charges with digital yuan

Published at: April 29, 2022

Residents in three major Chinese cities have begun paying tax, stamp duty and social security premiums using the country’s central bank digital currency (CBDC) — the digital yuan (e-CNY). 

According to a domestic news report, a number of government agencies in the Zhejiang province — located just south of Shanghai — are currently running real-world trials programs that involve citizens using the digital yuan to pay taxes.

The Zhejiang Taxation Bureau is working with the country’s central bank — the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) — to explore a variety of taxation payment methods using the digital yuan.

The PBoC and affiliated local government agencies are reportedly looking to the next major test for the digital yuan, the Asian Games which will take place in Hangzhou in September. Local authorities claim that the digital yuan could be used to streamline calculating tax-related activities.

Following the successful steps in the implementation of the digital RMB pilot program, which began public testing in April 2021, the PBoC stated that it will look to extend the program to more Chinese cities including Guangzhou, Tianjin and Chongqing.

On the other side of the ledger to taxation, one local government has chosen to “airdrop” 15 million digital yuan, or around $2.25 million at the time of writing, to its residents hoping to boost consumer spending during the pandemic and promote the use of the new currency.

Related: Hong Kong watchdog warns stablecoins could undermine HKD in CBDC paper

Roughly 130,000 residents of the Futian district in Shenzhen will receive a share of the 15 million digital yuan (e-CNY) in the form of a red envelope via the Chinese social media app, WeChat. The digital RMB airdrop marks the most recent government attempt to boost spending in areas of China most affected by the recent COVID-19-related lockdowns.

In Chinese and other East Asian cultures, monetary gifts are often handed out in red packets or envelopes, as the colored wrapping bestows good wishes and luck upon the recipient.

These developments extend China’s already significant lead in developing a central bank digital currency for public use, with the majority of countries still in the research stages of CBDC implementation.

According to state media, transactions in digital yuan across China came to nearly 87.6 billion yuan by the close of 2021.

Tags
Related Posts
New decentralized stablecoin in China targets international trade
As financial authorities around the globe become increasingly concerned about stablecoin regulation, a jurisdiction in China is preparing to pilot a new yuan-pegged stablecoin for international trade. Chris Banbury, head of global operations at permissionless blockchain project Conflux, told Cointelegraph on Sept. 21 that the firm will provide its technology to launch an offshore renminbi (RMB) stablecoin pegged to China’s central bank digital currency (CBDC), the digital yuan. “This is going to be pegged to the digital yuan in price only with no formal integration,” Banbury noted, adding that the project will be exploring how the token trades against other …
Adoption / Sept. 23, 2021
China debuts blockchain-based digital yuan salary payments in Xiong’an
China is progressing with its central bank digital currency (CBDC) tests, debuting blockchain-enabled salary payments in the digital yuan. According to the official website of the Xiong’an New Area, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) has successfully completed the nation’s first on-chain wage payouts in the digital yuan. Announcing the news on Saturday, Xiong’an authorities said that the pilot involved guidance and support from the Shijiazhuang-based PBoC branch, the Bank of China Hebei Xiong’an branch, as well as the National Development and Reform Commission. The new CBDC pilot used a blockchain-based payment platform to distribute salaries to workers on spring …
Technology / June 14, 2021
Major payments app WeChat to add support for China's digital yuan
WeChat, China's largest messaging app and one of the country's most popular payment services, will start supporting the Chinese government's digital currency. On Jan. 6, 2021, Tencent announced that it will begin accepting digital yuan payments via its proprietary mobile wallet WeChat Pay, according to a local news report. China has been developing a digital yuan since 2014, and it has yet to be implemented nationwide. If people start paying for goods and services with WeChat, which has more than 1 billion users, it will give it a significant boost. WeChat's enormous user base and multitude of wrapped services have …
Adoption / Jan. 6, 2022
China’s digital yuan gets smart contract functionality alongside new use cases
China’s Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) — the digital yuan, or eCNY — has received upgrades giving it smart contract functionality alongside a series of newly unveiled use cases. The smart contract function was launched on the Meituan app, a Chinese app offering retail and food delivery services, according to a Jan. 17 report by local cryptocurrency media outlet 8btc. When Meituan users place an order and pay with their e-CNY wallet, a smart contract triggers and searches for keywords and purchased items in their order. If a user buys something on the list of keywords for the day, they …
Adoption / Jan. 20, 2023
China doles out millions in digital yuan in bid to boost adoption: Report
Millions of dollars worth of China’s Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) has been handed out across the country over the Lunar New Year period in a bid to boost its takeup. According to a Feb. 6 report in the Global Times, an English-language outlet of the state-ran People’s Daily newspaper, around 200 “activities” for the e-CNY were launched across the country during the holiday period. These "activities" were made to “promote consumption” — the first of such since the government recently relaxed COVID-19 restrictions. Multiple cities reportedly gave away over $26.5 million, or 180 million yuan worth of the CBDC …
Adoption / Feb. 6, 2023