Inter-American Development Bank
facebook
twitter
youtube
linkedin
instagram
Abierto al públicoBeyond BordersCaribbean Development TrendsCiudades SosteniblesEnergía para el FuturoEnfoque EducaciónFactor TrabajoGente SaludableGestión fiscalGobernarteIdeas MatterIdeas que CuentanIdeaçãoImpactoIndustrias CreativasLa Maleta AbiertaMoviliblogMás Allá de las FronterasNegocios SosteniblesPrimeros PasosPuntos sobre la iSeguridad CiudadanaSostenibilidadVolvamos a la fuente¿Y si hablamos de igualdad?Home
Citizen Security and Justice Creative Industries Development Effectiveness Early Childhood Development Education Energy Envirnment. Climate Change and Safeguards Fiscal policy and management Gender and Diversity Health Labor and pensions Open Knowledge Public management Science, Technology and Innovation  Trade and Regional Integration Urban Development and Housing Water and Sanitation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Beyond Borders

  • HOME
  • CATEGORIES
    • Asia – LAC
    • Innovation and Technology
    • Investment Attraction
    • Public-Private Alliances
    • Regional Cooperation
    • Regional Integration
    • Trade & Investment Agreements
    • Trade Facilitation
    • Trade Promotion
  • Authors
  • Spanish
tracing products back origin facilitating regional trade

Tracing products back to their origin: facilitating regional trade through blockchain

February 19, 2021 by Alejandra Radl - Jimena Sotelo Leave a Comment


The COVID-19 crisis is challenging governments to step up their efforts to digitize public management. International trade is no exception. This is an opportunity to make a qualitative leap towards the modernization of foreign trade procedures through technologies such as blockchain. 

The need for government authorities to exchange documents, usually in paper format, to comply with requirements relating to the import, export, and transit of goods can constitute a barrier to trade. Processing an international trade transaction at a border crossing can require the exchange of around 36 documents on average, and up to 240 copies when financing is also considered.  

It is estimated that exchanging paper documents reduces potential international trade by 15%. The digitization and modernization of customs and logistics processes could restore that 15%, which would imply a US$ 1.8 trillion trade increase this year, and US$5.2 trillion per year globally up to 2050, according to Tradelens. 

Facilitating document exchange in foreign trade operations in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) by using blockchain would make regional value chains more efficient, a much-needed step forward for trade after the pandemic. These efficiencies would boost private-sector efforts to relocate part of the production chains for given products or services to Latin America (nearshoring) and would foster preferential trade by leveraging the rich networks of trade agreements that are already in force.  

Blockchain in trade: the IDB and WEF partnership 

Since 2018, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the World Economic Forum (WEF) have worked together to validate blockchain’s potential for increasing efficiency, transparency, and interoperability in the trade ecosystem. 

As part of this joint effort, the IDB’s Integration and Trade Sector recently published two reports that seek to promote the use of blockchain in trade: “Windows of Opportunity: Facilitating Trade with Blockchain Technology,” a white paper published in partnership with the WEF, and “Blockchain and international trade: new technologies to increase and improve Latin America’s international transition,” published in Spanish by its Institute for the Integration of Latin America and the Caribbean (INTAL). The latter includes a chapter entitled “Tracing products back to their origin: facilitating regional trade through blockchain” by Rafael Cornejo.  

Rethinking the Integrated Process of Origin (IPO) 

One of the documents exchanged in preferential foreign trade is the certificate of origin. Exporters must obtain it to be able to export within their trading bloc without having to pay customs duties. 

There are currently three phases in trade operations impacted by the regulations contained in trade agreements on rules of origin. These phases work independently and in isolation from one another in terms of documentation. 

  • Phase 1: The manufacturing process of the exported good 
  • Phase 2: Issuing the declaration and certification that the good qualifies as an originating good 
  • Phase 3: Control and verification of origin 

Implementing an Integrated Process of Origin (IPO) using blockchain would merge these three phases into a single process, improving access to tariff preferences. The main advantages would be: 

  • Access to secure input information provided by the producer and the issuer of the certification of origin to determine compliance. 
  • Greater security for operators within preferential trade and better information on the origin of goods. 
  • Customs facilities can focus efforts on verifying the least reliable import operations. 

Figure 1. Data Providers and IPO Users 

tracing products back origin facilitating regional trade

Source: Rafael Cornejo, “Trazar desde el origen: facilitando el comercio regional con blockchain [Tracing products back to their origin: facilitating regional trade through blockchain], Integration & Trade Journal no. 46 (IDB). 

What are the advantages of using blockchain in IPOs? 

Blockchain has the potential to improve and facilitate the operational conditions of trade in goods imported under preferential schemes. Applying this technology to certifying the origin of a good leads to greater security and more guarantees, contributes to streamlining the monitoring process by providing more reliable data on the origin of each product, and facilitating the application of risk analysis criteria. The following chart summarizes the benefits in each of the phases described above. 

Figure 2. Advantages of the IPO that derive from the use of blockchain 

tracing products back origin facilitating regional trade

Source: Rafael Cornejo, “Trazar desde el origen: facilitando el comercio regional con blockchain [Tracing products back to their origin: facilitating regional trade through blockchain], Integration & Trade Journal no. 46 (IDB). 

Blockchain would help implement the extended cumulation of origin, 1 which has yet to be put in place appropriately and effectively in LAC. It would also increase the efficiency of trade transactions, therefore helping to increase preferential trade operations. It won’t be necessary to prove that a specific product qualifies as an originating good because the supply chain itself would show whether it qualified for preferential market access.

Who are the stakeholders in an IPO? 

Implementing an IPO is a process that involves both the public and private sectors. Stakeholders include private trade operators who participate in exporting products, government authorities processing and overseeing these procedures, and origin-certifying bodies such as chambers of commerce or industry associations. 

Figure 3. Stakeholders in IPOs 

Source: Rafael Cornejo, “Trazar desde el origen: facilitando el comercio regional con blockchain [Tracing products back to their origin: facilitating regional trade through blockchain], Integration & Trade Journal no. 46 (IDB). 

Next steps 

Given the opportunity presented by this technology, specialists from the IDB’s Integration and Trade Sector and the WEF are preparing a proposal to implement a blockchain pilot project in some LAC countries. It seeks to validate the benefits of using blockchain in the IPO and assess its impact on strengthening preferential trade. The following are the activities identified to implement the pilot project: 

Figure 4. Pilot project activity sequence 

Source: Rafael Cornejo, “Trazar desde el origen: facilitando el comercio regional con blockchain [Tracing products back to their origin: facilitating regional trade through blockchain], Integration & Trade Journal no. 46 (IDB). 

Some countries such as Chile, Colombia, and Perú already started exchanging digital certificates of origin. Their objective is to streamline trade through their respective single windows for foreign trade, which the IDB has played a major role in implementing. Bilateral efforts like these are important. Similar initiatives are required in other countries since there is more need than ever before for regional policies involving both public and private stakeholders. 

According to a survey conducted by the WEF, 65% of the polled companies have started using new technologies to reconfigure their value chains since the pandemic began, and 59% have made efforts to increase the visibility and control of the data involved in these chains. 

To make the most of the opportunities created by the changes to global value chains triggered by the pandemic, it is vital to harness new technologies (the so-called TradeTech) to improve trade, increase efficiency, drive economic development, and enhance inclusion in LAC. 


  1. Cumulation of origin is the mechanism contemplated in trade agreements that enables originating inputs that were produced by a country party to a given trade agreement to be recognized as originating goods in any other member country of the agreement. All agreements contemplate the cumulation of goods obtained or processed in other member countries, and the cumulation of processing is also permitted in some cases. If cumulation is not allowed, producers in a given country can only source inputs produced within that country if they are to comply with the rules of origin for the final good (Cornejo, “Trazar desde el origen: facilitando el comercio regional con Blockchain [Tracing products back to their origin: facilitating regional trade through blockchain].”)


Filed Under: Trade Facilitation

Alejandra Radl

Alejandra Radl is specialist in integration and trade at the Institute for the Integration of Latin America and the Caribbean (INTAL) at the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB). She has 20 years of experience working on infrastructure integration projects, development of border regions and facilitation of international trade. She gives strategic support to binational and regional initiatives in the South American region and leads the design of digital platforms and tools. She is project fellow in Digital Trade at the Center for the Fourth Industrial Revolution at the World Economic Forum (WEF). Previously, she worked for international organizations such as the Development Bank of Latin America (CAF) and FONPLATA. She has a bachelor’s degree in International Relations at Universidad del Salvador and a postgraduate degree in International Project Management at Universidad Católica Argentina.

Jimena Sotelo

Jimena Sotelo is Project Lead of Digital Trade at the Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution of the World Economic Forum, based in San Francisco. Her work focuses on the intersection of new technologies and trade. She has 10 years of experience working on trade in international organizations and the private sector, particularly in relation to trade in services and digital trade. Previously, she worked at the International Trade Centre and the think tank ICTSD in Geneva, as well as for the Organization of American States in Washington DC. Her experience in the private sector was at Banco Comafi SA and DuPont, in Buenos Aires. She has a bachelor’s degree in International Trade and a postgraduate course in International Business from the Universidad Argentina de la Empresa (UADE), where she was awarded top honors. She also holds a Master of International Law and Economics from the World Trade Institute (WTI) at the University of Bern, where she graduated Summa Cum Laude. Jimena is a citizen of Argentina and Italy. Her native language is Spanish with additional fluency in English and Portuguese.

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Follow Us

Subscribe

Search

Productivity and Trade

This space explores how trade, investment and sustainable development in strategic sectors can boost productivity and strengthen more dynamic, inclusive and resilient economies in Latin America and the Caribbean. From trade facilitation and export and investment promotion to entrepreneurship, the development of public-private synergies, agri-food systems and tourism, we address challenges and opportunities for growth in the region.

Related posts

  • Blockchain technology: a new opportunity for international trade
  • Why fragmented integration hampers fragmented international production
  • The Spaghetti Bowl and International Supply Chains
  • Strategies and mechanisms to promote the convergence of trade agreements in Latin America
  • Making trade more efficient with blockchain

Categories

Footer

Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo
facebook
twitter
youtube
youtube
youtube

    Blog posts written by Bank employees:

    Copyright © Inter-American Development Bank ("IDB"). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons IGO 3.0 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives. (CC-IGO 3.0 BY-NC-ND) license and may be reproduced with attribution to the IDB and for any non-commercial purpose. No derivative work is allowed. Any dispute related to the use of the works of the IDB that cannot be settled amicably shall be submitted to arbitration pursuant to the UNCITRAL rules. The use of the IDB's name for any purpose other than for attribution, and the use of IDB's logo shall be subject to a separate written license agreement between the IDB and the user and is not authorized as part of this CC- IGO license. Note that link provided above includes additional terms and conditions of the license.


    For blogs written by external parties:

    For questions concerning copyright for authors that are not IADB employees please complete the contact form for this blog.

    The opinions expressed in this blog are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the IDB, its Board of Directors, or the countries they represent.

    Attribution: in addition to giving attribution to the respective author and copyright owner, as appropriate, we would appreciate if you could include a link that remits back the IDB Blogs website.



    Privacy Policy

    Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

    Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo

    Aviso Legal

    Las opiniones expresadas en estos blogs son las de los autores y no necesariamente reflejan las opiniones del Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo, sus directivas, la Asamblea de Gobernadores o sus países miembros.

    facebook
    twitter
    youtube
    This site uses cookies to optimize functionality and give you the best possible experience. If you continue to navigate this website beyond this page, cookies will be placed on your browser.
    To learn more about cookies, click here
    X
    Manage consent

    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
    Necessary
    Always Enabled
    Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
    Non-necessary
    Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
    SAVE & ACCEPT