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Facebook’s Libra could ‘damage’ the yuan if China’s currency is not convertible, says central bank

  • People’s Bank of China (PBOC) breaks silence on Facebook’s Libra, says that it will not be sustainable without the support of central banks
  • A PBOC official said Libra could ‘spark depreciation in domestic currencies and worsen the financial situation of the poor’

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Facebook unveiled its global cryptocurrency “Libra” on June 18, in a new initiative in payments for the world’s biggest social network. Photo: Reuters
Bloomberg

Facebook’s push to create its own cryptocurrency, called Libra, must be put under the oversight of monetary authorities, according to a senior official from China’s central bank.

As a convertible cryptocurrency asset or a type of stablecoin, Libra can flow freely across borders, and it “will not be sustainable without the support and supervision of central banks”, Mu Changchun, deputy director of the People’s Bank of China (PBOC)’s payments department, wrote in comments provided to Bloomberg.

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Digital currencies can be used for lending, could disrupt monetary policy, and may induce foreign exchange risks in economies with a volatile local currency, Mu said. In addition, Facebook has not made clear its commitment to anti-money-laundering and anti-terrorist financing responsibilities, as well as how it will protect the privacy of its users, Mu wrote.

Caixin published similar comments on Libra from Mu this weekend.

The Chinese central bank has broken its silence on Facebook’s new Libra currency. Photo: Reuters
The Chinese central bank has broken its silence on Facebook’s new Libra currency. Photo: Reuters

“In the longer term, the yuan will be damaged by Libra if it’s not convertible,” Mu told Bloomberg. Making the yuan freely exchangeable would deal with that risk, he said.

The central bank is organising market-oriented institutions to jointly research and develop a central bank digital currency, and the programme has been approved by the State Council, Wang Xin, director of the PBOC Research Bureau, told a seminar at Peking University on Monday.

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“From the government’s perspective, we pay more attention to its influence on financial services, monetary policy and financial stability,” Wang said, according to a report in the China Daily.

The California-based tech giant’s announcement last month of its plans to issue a digital currency prompted global central banks including the European Central Bank and the Bank of England to voice concerns. Though Facebook itself is not generally accessible in China, the PBOC is also signalling that it is worried by issuing a public response.

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