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Editor's note: THIS IS CHINA is an original animated series CGTN Digital presents for the Two Sessions. Each episode focuses on the most popular topics and trends in China, recounting how China's economy and society, guided by government policies, have evolved in the new era.
The key term in this episode: The Cashless Era.
Spending a day without cash or bank cards is perfectly unremarkable in China.
More than three-quarters of Chinese people were using digital payment in preference to cash by 2017 and the number has continued to rise.
Eighty-six percent now use mobile payment, whether to pay utility bills, travel short or long distances, make appointments at hospital or go grocery shopping.
The growth in use of digital payment has been supported by the development of advanced technologies.
According to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), the number of 4G base stations in China totaled 5.44 million in 2019 – more than half of the world's total.
With the innovation of the QR code, online and offline payments have been further combined.
Read more:
China's QR code industry to be worth multi-trillions of yuan by 2025
Common Destiny: 'QR code planters' bring cashless payment to the world
Mobile payment platforms WeChat Pay and Alipay have also contributed to the development of the cashless society in China.
In recent years, Bluetooth payment, biometric payment, sonic payment, AR/VR payment and other emerging payment methods have been launched.
Meanwhile, the number of 5G base stations in use nationwide has exceeded 200,000 according to the latest data from the MIIT, which means that China has hit the "fast-forward" button on the construction of Internet infrastructure.
The proportion of 5G users in China is expected to increase to nearly 50 percent by 2025, and 5G commercialization will create more possibilities for the growth of the cashless era.
Read more:
5G Phones will outsell 4G by 2023
China leads global race in key 5G patents: report
High rate of internet availability
The country's internet availability rate has increased by 3.8 percentage points year on year to 59.6 percent, according to the 43rd statistical report from the China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC), further laying the foundation for a high rate of online payment users.
The central bank and other financial authorities have announced they want to spread the benefits of going cashless to the four out of 10 people in China who still live in rural areas. According to the central bank, 66.5 percent of people in rural areas were already using digital payments by 2017.
In fact, mobile payment also helps the sharing economy, e-retailing, digital governance, education and healthcare as well as other emerging technologies, business fields and models, such as smart governance, smart hospitals, automated payment and other industrial applications.
The merits and convenience of a cashless society are significant, but concerns over safety and privacy also need to be addressed.
And the risk that a cashless society could marginalize older and less tech-savvy spenders and the less well-off also need to be considered.
Editor: Duan Fengyuan
Copy Editor: John Goodrich
Chief Editor: Chen Ran
Senior Consultant: Dr. Xia Jixuan
Producer: Si Nan
Supervisor: Zhang Shilei