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Former PBOC official says China's digital yuan is little used - Caixin

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China's central-bank digital currency is little used, a former official of the People's Bank of China (PBOC) said on Wednesday, financial news outlet Caixin reported.

Expressing disappointment with the result of a trial in select provinces and cities, the former official, Xie Ping, told a conference that application of the so-called digital yuan needed to be widened.

"The cumulative circulation of the digital yuan in the two years of the trial has been only 100 billion yuan ($14 billion)," he said. The figure showed that "usage has been low, highly inactive."

"The results are not ideal," Xie, a former PBOC director-general of research, said at the conference on digital finance held by Tsinghua University, according to Caixin.

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Central bank digital currencies are digital tokens, similar to cryptocurrencies, issued by central banks. China has been a leader among several countries that are developing the new means of exchange.

"What needs to change is the digital yuan acting only as a substitute for cash and only for consumption," Xie said.

"Cash, bank cards and China's third-party payment mechanisms have formed a payment market structure that has met needs for daily consumption," he said. "The common people are used to it, and changing it is difficult."

Digital-yuan business had no synergistic effect and no commercial benefits in banks' business, he said. Meanwhile, third-party payment systems, such as Alibaba Group's Alipay, offered a more attractive range of functions, such as investment, insurance and consumer lending.

To address the problem, usage of the digital yuan could be expanded - for example, by letting individuals buy financial products with it, Xie said. Also, it could be connected with more payment platforms, to move into more consumption situations.

($1 = 6.9691 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Jason Xue and Brenda Goh; Editing by Bradley Perrett)