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From lottery draws to fiscal spending, China broadens digital yuan footprint

May 30 (Reuters) – China’s central bank is embarking on a broad push to increase the use of digital yuan at home and abroad, putting Beijing on a different and potentially rival path from the United States in shaping the future of currency, various industry sources said.

In a series of measures, many of which are announced here for the first time, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) is giving policy incentives to banks and behind-the-scenes directives to expand the use of the digital yuan, also known as e-CNY, in areas ranging from lottery draws to green electricity fees to financial spending.

Sources said banks are being pressured to increase the use of digital yuan in cross-border transactions, especially along Belt and Road Initiative routes, and lenders are racing to develop compatible products such as loans, letters of credit and invoices.

All the sources declined to be named because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

PBOC did not respond to Reuters’ request for comment.

China’s bet on the digital yuan stands in stark contrast to the United States, where President Donald Trump has embraced stablecoins while banning the domestic circulation of central bank digital currencies.

Some industry sources said Beijing’s move was motivated in part by a desire to reduce its dependence on a global payments system dominated by Western institutions and dependent on the dollar as the world’s reserve currency.

The digital yuan serves as a technological underpinning to help ensure China’s international trade flows continue uninterrupted during future geopolitical shocks, a concern underscored by external instability linked to the Middle East war, one industry source said.

Broker China Securities Co. “The war has exposed the risks of weaponization of the dollar and highlighted the urgent need for dedollarization among Middle East oil producers,” one report said, adding that the Iran conflict had accelerated the internationalization of the yuan. he said.

As a result, it was stated that the global influence of the yuan could expand “from trade to the geopolitical sphere”.

SMALL BASE, BIG GOALS

Of course, the digital yuan is starting from a low base and faces structural limits on how far it can expand.

According to the latest official data, cumulative digital yuan transactions reached 16.7 trillion yuan ($2.47 trillion) as of November since its debut in 2019, compared to 279 trillion yuan in China’s UnionPay card transactions in 2025 alone.

“China and the US are the two locomotives of the global economy and both are pushing their own standards” in cross-border digital payment, said Xin Yan, CEO of Sign, which creates digital infrastructure for governments and institutions.

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