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Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC), also known as the digital rupee or e-rupee in India, is a digital form of fiat currency issued by a country’s central bank [1]. It is defined as a digital liability of the central bank that is widely available to the general public and is exchangeable one-to-one with physical fiat currency [1].

Key Features of CBDC

According to the sources, CBDC possesses several unique characteristics that distinguish it from other forms of digital payment:

Categories of Use

The sources divide CBDC into two primary categories based on its intended use:

  1. Retail (CBDC-R): This is a general-purpose digital version of cash meant for daily transactions by the private sector, non-financial consumers, and businesses [3].
  2. Wholesale (CBDC-W): This version has restricted access and is designed for select financial institutions to settle interbank transfers and other large-scale transactions [3].

Forms and Issuance Models

The e-rupee can take different technical forms and be distributed through different models:

Global Context: The Digital Yuan

The sources note that China is exploring an innovative feature with its digital version of the yuan, known as DCEP. They are testing expiration dates, meaning the currency could expire if not used within a certain timeframe, essentially forcing consumers to spend it by a specific date [5].

To understand the difference between these systems, you can think of bank money like a digital tab at a local shop where they keep track of what they owe you; CBDC is like having the actual government-stamped coins in a digital pocket—it is the value itself, not just a record of it held by a middleman.