Economy, business, innovation

China Expands Digital Yuan

China has just taken another decisive step toward the future of money, and once again, the West is pretending this is simply about “payment efficiency.” The People’s Bank of China has now expanded its digital yuan program by adding 12 additional banks, bringing the total number of participating institutions to 22.

China launched the digital yuan back in 2019, and despite already having dominant digital payment systems like Alipay and WeChat Pay, they continue to push forward aggressively. The reason is simple. Those systems are private. The digital yuan is not. This is a direct liability of the central bank, meaning every transaction can be monitored, tracked, and ultimately controlled.

This latest expansion dramatically increases the infrastructure behind the system. These new banks will handle wallet creation, payments, and settlement, effectively embedding the digital yuan deeper into everyday economic life. This is how adoption is forced. Not by demand, but by integration.

What is equally important is what China is doing at the same time. They are cracking down on cryptocurrencies and banning stablecoins, eliminating any competing alternative that would allow citizens to transact outside the state-controlled system.

And this is where people need to understand what a central bank digital currency truly represents. I have warned repeatedly that CBDCs are not about innovation. They are about surveillance and control. Governments have long wanted the ability to monitor every transaction, track every movement of capital, and ultimately dictate how money can be spent. A digital currency allows them to do exactly that. You can impose spending limits, restrict purchases, freeze accounts instantly, and even enforce policy at the individual level.

China is simply the first to implement it at scale. The digital yuan has already processed trillions in transactions, and its expansion into cross-border systems shows the real objective. They are building an alternative financial architecture that bypasses the dollar system entirely.

You can see this clearly in projects like mBridge, where digital currencies are being used for international settlements outside of SWIFT. The goal is not just domestic control, but global influence. The more countries adopt this infrastructure, the less dependent they become on the existing Western financial system. At the same time, China is even moving toward making digital yuan holdings interest-bearing, further incentivizing adoption and transforming it into a full banking alternative. This is no longer just a payment tool. It is becoming the foundation of a parallel financial system.

Governments do not introduce these systems when confidence is high. They introduce them when confidence is collapsing and they need to regain control over capital flows. We are entering that phase now. The sovereign debt crisis is not going away. Governments are desperate to maintain control over capital as fiscal conditions deteriorate. A CBDC gives them the tool they have always wanted. Total visibility and total authority over money itself.

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