South Korea Accelerates CBDC Testing With Direct Integration Into Bank Systems

South Korea Accelerates CBDC Testing With Direct Integration Into Bank Systems
Table of Contents

TL;DR:

  • The Bank of Korea’s CBDC advances to its second phase, integrating deposit tokens into existing commercial banking systems.
  • Participants will be able to use the tokens for transactions and settlements, and the pilot will include replacing government subsidies with digital vouchers.
  • The United States, under the Trump administration, is moving forward with legislation to ban the issuance of CBDCs until December 31, 2030.

The Bank of Korea is taking its experiment with CBDCs to a new stage. According to reports published by ET News, the South Korean central bank’s pilot enters its second phase, this time with a direct integration into the central account systems of participating commercial banks.

In this new stage, banking institutions will be required to establish electronic wallets, vouchers, and a blockchain-based infrastructure to manage the digital currency within conventional banking systems. Unlike the previous phase—where consumers could only experiment with payments using deposit tokens distributed in digital wallets—participants will now be able to use them to carry out transactions and settlements in the real banking environment. The pilot also contemplates replacing government subsidies and public policy funds with digital vouchers.

The Bank of Korea has not responded to inquiries about the program’s progress.

CBDC: A Threat with Banking Infrastructure

CBDC post

What is presented as financial modernization is, in practice, the construction of a monetary surveillance system with institutional backing. A CBDC is not a cryptocurrency: there is no decentralization, there is no real privacy, and the State retains the technical capacity to block, freeze, or condition the use of money. Integrating that mechanism into the core of commercial banking systems does not expand the citizen’s capabilities, but the State’s power over them.

The contrast with the United States’ position could not be clearer. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reaffirmed that the Donald Trump administration will not issue a CBDC and that the focus will be on positioning the United States as a leader in decentralized digital assets. The Senate and the House of Representatives also reached a legislative agreement that includes explicit language to ban the issuance of a CBDC until December 31, 2030.

While South Korea deepens its digital monetary control infrastructure, Washington is betting—at least for now—on a financial architecture where the State does not operate as the omniscient intermediary of every transaction.

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