China Fires Shot at Dollar: Digital Yuan Expansion Begins

By Rachel Lourdesamy June 19, 2025 In Banks, China
A sleek scale balances a luminous yuan coin against a glowing digital dollar cube symbolizing financial strategy and market innovation
Source:AdobeStock
  • China’s central bank promotes e-CNY and calls for more resilient, decentralised cross-border payment infrastructure.
  • New reforms include blockchain trade finance pilots, green finance expansion, and a personal credit reporting agency.
  • Central bank governor Pan criticises outdated systems and calls for stronger representation of developing nations in the IMF and World Bank.

China is challenging the dominance of the US dollar in global finance, with central bank governor Pan Gongsheng laying out a vision for a multi-currency international monetary system. At the Lujiazui Forum in Shanghai on 18 June, Pan called for a monetary structure in which major currencies operate in parallel, ensuring mutual oversight and reducing reliance on any single sovereign currency.

Developing a multi-polar international monetary system will help strengthen policy constraints on sovereign currency countries, enhance the resilience of the system, and better safeguard global financial stability.

Pan Gongsheng, People’s Bank of China Governor

To support this effort, China will establish an international operations centre for the digital yuan – also known as e-CNY – in Shanghai and expand its usage through initiatives such as the Cross Border Interbank Payment System, which recently saw uptake by six foreign banks.

Pan pointed to the inefficiencies and vulnerabilities of traditional cross-border payment systems, describing them as outdated and susceptible to geopolitical risks. He said these systems could be “politicised and weaponised” and called for the adoption of digital infrastructure such as e-CNY to create a more inclusive and secure global payments environment.

While Pan avoided naming the US directly, his remarks alluded to issues often associated with US monetary dominance, such as fiscal instability and unilateral sanctions.

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Redrawing the Balance of Global Financial Power

Pan also addressed structural imbalances in international financial governance, pointing to the long-standing underrepresentation of emerging markets and developing countries in institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

The share of emerging markets and developing countries is significantly lower than their actual position in the global economy.

Pan Gongsheng, People’s Bank of China Governor

China’s central bank announced a package of domestic reforms to accompany its international push. These include pilot programmes for structural monetary tools in Shanghai, such as blockchain-based trade finance, credit-based refinancing schemes, and green finance initiatives. Plans were also announced for a centralised trade reporting system for the interbank market and the launch of a new personal credit reporting agency to support a wider range of financial products.

Pan’s remarks come as China moves to build alternative financial infrastructure, distancing itself from Western-dominated systems in response to global shifts.

Related: Ripple’s RLUSD Stablecoin Grows 85%, Gets Integrated into Cross-Border Payments

Rachel Lourdesamy
Author

Rachel Lourdesamy

Rachel is a freelance writer based in Sydney with experience within financial services, marketing, and corporate communications in the APAC region. An avid reader and a graduate of the University of Sydney, she covers topics including business, finance and human interest.

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