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The Digital Yuan vs. the Digital Euro: Diverging Paths in Central Bank Digital Currency Developments

Open Access
|Jul 2025

Abstract

The emergence of Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) reflects the evolving role of central banks in digital finance. Among the most advanced initiatives, China’s digital yuan (e-CNY) and the European Central Bank’s Digital Euro represent contrasting approaches to CBDC design, regulation, and monetary policy. While the e-CNY prioritizes state control, financial sovereignty, and cross-border expansion, the proposed Digital Euro emphasizes privacy, financial stability, and regulatory compliance. This paper critically examines these two initiatives across four key dimensions: technological infrastructure, legal and regulatory frameworks, economic and monetary implications, and security/privacy/ethical considerations. Using a comparative qualitative approach, the paper synthesizes insights from central bank reports, policy research, and academic literature, assessing the trade-offs and challenges each CBDC faces. Findings show that the e-CNY can enhance monetary policy efficiency and adoption yet raises concerns over financial surveillance and capital control risks. The Digital Euro, by contrast, aims to preserve banking sector stability and user privacy, while facing hurdles in regulatory fragmentation and adoption scalability. The paper contributes to the current CBDC discourse by offering a structured comparison, highlighting policy lessons for central banks navigating digital currency implementation, while underscoring the need for harmonized global regulatory standards, balanced tradeoffs between privacy and oversight, and the strategic role CBDCs can have for more efficient monetary policy, financial stability and inclusion.

Language: English
Page range: 2978 - 2992
Published on: Jul 24, 2025
Published by: Bucharest University of Economic Studies
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2025 Thomas Paulovici, published by Bucharest University of Economic Studies
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.