Putin orders planeloads of humanitarian aid to be sent to Egypt The Russian Ministry Emergency Situations said on Friday that it would send two aircraft [more…]
Digital trade corridors can fix our outdated supply chain
Trade policy still thinks in terms of borders. Supply chains moved on long ago.
The old model wasn’t wrong. When production was mostly national and exports crossed a frontier once on their way to market, managing trade at the border made sense. But that’s no longer how things work.
If information has already been verified once, why should anyone have to re-create it at the next border?
In North American manufacturing, intermediate goods move back and forth across borders at multiple stages of production. In automotive, a single component can cross the same frontier three or four times before final assembly. No one sat down and designed it that way — it’s just what efficiency ended up producing.
Every crossing still triggers the same rituals: compliance checks, data submissions. All that costly friction adds up.
Governments haven’t been idle. Digitization, single windows, paperless trade — these have all helped. But they mostly improve individual touchpoints. They don’t really change how the system works end to end.
Trade policy is still organized around discrete events: a declaration filed, an inspection completed, a shipment released. That was fine when trade itself was simpler. Now the harder problem is managing trust, data, and compliance across an entire journey, through multiple agencies, multiple jurisdictions, and the same goods crossing borders more than once.
Digital trade corridors are an attempt to deal with that reality. The formal definition sounds technical, but the idea isn’t complicated. A DTC connects existing systems so that they can share information without forcing everyone onto the same platform.
Put more plainly: If information has already been verified once, why should anyone have to re-create it at the next border? Yet that’s exactly what usually happens today.
Fixing that changes quite a bit. Regulators don’t just see a shipment when it arrives; they can see its history. That allows them to assess risk earlier and more precisely. And when that happens, the usual trade-off between control and speed starts to look less inevitable than we have assumed.
One group that would notice the difference immediately is smaller firms. Large multinationals can absorb compliance costs. They have the teams and systems to do it. Smaller exporters don’t. When things like classification, origin, and documentation are built in to the corridor itself and offered as services, those fixed costs start to spread out.
There’s a bigger shift under way, and it doesn’t get discussed nearly as much as it should. Governments and industries are experimenting with what you might call joint production zones — arrangements in which different stages of production are deliberately spread across countries that are trying to align their regulatory approaches.
RELATED: America’s elites trusted global trade. Japan trusted reality.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
Pharmaceutical supply chains are already being set up this way, with different stages distributed across allied countries. In shipbuilding, Korean and American firms have started collaborating on projects in which modules are built in one place and assembled in another. What has been missing is the connective tissue to make it run smoothly.
That’s where DTCs come in. By allowing compliance and provenance data to move with the goods and to be reused rather than re-created, they make frequent cross-border movement workable at scale.
There is, predictably, a sovereignty concern. The worry is that deeper integration means less control. But that assumes that the current system actually provides strong control. In reality, point-in-time checks at the border offer only a snapshot. What corridors provide is more like a continuous record. In many cases, that strengthens oversight.
None of this is especially mysterious from a policy perspective. Electronic trade documents need to be recognized across borders. Data standards need to line up; there is already a base to build on. Participation can be tiered so that more reliable actors get smoother treatment. The harder part is treating this as infrastructure rather than as a series of pilot projects.
Trade policy has a habit of lagging behind how trade actually works. That’s not new. What is different now is the scale of the gap. Supply chains have already reorganized themselves around a cross-border reality. The administrative systems haven’t caught up — and the costs of that mismatch are starting to show.
Global supply chain, Supply chains, Global trade, Trade policy, American manufacturing, Exports, Imports, Digital trade corridors, Opinion & analysis
Study Using Fiber Optic Cables Measures Water Retention Impact of Soil Tilling
(NaturalNews) Study DetailsA recent study has employed fiber optic cables and distributed acoustic sensing technology to measure water movement in agricultural so…
Fungal Infection Treatable with Household Items, Natural Health Advocates Say
(NaturalNews) Athlete’s Foot Fungi Thrive in Damp ConditionsA common fungal infection of the feet, known medically as tinea pedis or athlete’s foot, is caused by …
Carbohydrate intolerance: The hidden culprit behind weight gain, fatigue and chronic cravings
(NaturalNews) Despite eating “healthy” carbs (whole grains, fruits, starchy veggies), some people experience unexplained weight gain, fatigue and sugar cravings…
The silent saboteur: How a mineral deficiency affects sleep quality
(NaturalNews) Magnesium is crucial for sleep. It helps regulate the brain’s calming chemicals and melatonin, the hormone that controls your sleep-wake cycle. A …
Hidden danger in fast fashion: Lead-laced clothing poses severe health risks for children and adults
(NaturalNews) The CDC confirms that any lead exposure harms children, causing irreversible neurological damage, developmental delays, seizures and cardiovascula…
White House Briefly Renamed ‘Epstein Island’ for Google Pixel Users
(NaturalNews) White House Listing Briefly Renamed ‘Epstein Island’ for Google Pixel UsersThe official listing for the White House was temporarily renamed ‘Epstein…
China Dismisses U.S. Report Alleging Top Chipmaker Aided Iranian Forces
(NaturalNews) IntroductionChinese authorities have dismissed as false a Reuters report alleging that the country’s largest semiconductor manufacturer supplied chi…
Federal Court Approves Settlement Limiting Government Contact with Social Media Platforms
(NaturalNews) Court Approves Settlement Restricting Government Role in Social Media Content ModerationA federal court has approved a long-term settlement that pla…
Chlorine Dioxide: The miracle solution for health, safety and self-reliance
(NaturalNews) The book “Chlorine Dioxide: The Prepper’s Ultimate Survival Tool” states that chlorine dioxide (ClO?) is a powerful, natural disinfectant critical…
A shift in strategy: DHS adjusts asylum policy following security review
(NaturalNews) The Department of Homeland Security is partially lifting a months-long freeze on asylum application processing. The freeze was implemented afte…
Global vaccine passport push accelerates as WHO partners with Singapore firm tied to Pfizer and Bill Gates
(NaturalNews) In a move that solidifies a permanent global surveillance infrastructure under the guise of public health, the World Health Organization is advancing …
‘Feeding Our Future’ scam artist agrees to plea deal with a slap-on-the-wrist sentence
A man who admitted to enriching himself in the “Feeding Our Future” scam was facing up to three years in prison but got a slap on the wrist after agreeing to a plea deal.
Abdul Abubakar Ali claimed to have served up about 1.5 million meals and collected federal funds through the Federal Child Nutrition Program, but prosecutors said he didn’t actually serve any at all.
‘Public trust in government programs has been undermined’ by the scheme.
In Oct. 2022, he agreed to plead guilty to one charge of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Prosecutors said he paid $92,500 in restitution so far and provided valuable information to investigators. He also took responsibility for his actions.
Both the defense and prosecutors asked the judge for a sentence of probation, but the judge sentenced Ali to a year and one day in prison on Monday.
U.S. District Court Judge Nancy Brasel said that his role was too egregious for a probation sentence. She noted that he completely made up the meal count rather than exaggerated them and that he had recruited another person in the scheme.
“Public trust in government programs has been undermined” by the scheme, she added.
More than $3 million was stolen through the scheme, which transferred the money to S & S Catering and laundered the money through Franklyn Transportation, a shell company.
Ali has agreed to turn himself in to federal prison on June 2.
The Trump administration has sent federal investigators to Minnesota in order to probe federal funding fraud, especially from members of the Somali community.
While some have criticized the effort as being animated by racism, others point out that dozens have already been arrested and convicted in the fraud schemes in Minnesota.
Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
Minnesota somali scam, Feeding our future scam, Minnesota scam, Abdul abubakar ali, Politics
‘We’re Entering A Constitutional Crisis In The US’: James O’Keefe Served Restraining Order While Live On Air
O’Keefe served restraining order for domestic violence by former Project Veritas board member.
“Sadly, The Trump We All Knew & Loved No Longer Exists…”
Alex Jones faces grim reality that President Trump may truly be out to lunch.
Special Tuesday Evening Broadcast: Declassified Documents Prove Government Has Been Adding Toxic Poisons/Compounds To Food, Water, Vaccines Since Early 1950’s To Dumb-Down & Control The Public!
Researchers join Alex Jones to expose these horrific attacks & what we can do to counter them!
The power of seeds: Six nutrient-dense options to boost your health
(NaturalNews) Seeds like pumpkin, hemp, chia, sesame, flax and sunflower are packed with protein, healthy fats, fiber and essential vitamins/minerals, offering …
The moringa effect: What this superfood does to your blood sugar
(NaturalNews) Moringa is promoted as a superfood that may help manage blood sugar, particularly for people with Type 2 diabetes or prediabetes. Its active compo…
Trump Tariffs Prove Effective: Study Shows $85 Billion Revenue Boost, Reduced China Dependence, with Minimal GDP Impact
(NaturalNews) OverviewA newly released academic analysis has found that tariff policies implemented under President Donald Trump generated significant federal rev…
Strait of Hormuz closure sparks global oil crisis, with long-term price surge expected
(NaturalNews) The Strait of Hormuz, handling 20% of global oil supply, has been effectively shut down by Iran amid tensions with Israel and the U.S. Crude price…
