Tokenised Trade Finance: Can Blockchain Bridge India’s $300 Billion Export-Credit Gap?
India's $770 billion export economy hides a critical flaw: small and mid-size firms struggle to convert purchase orders into bank credit. The Asian Development Bank estimates a $2.5 trillion global trade finance gap, with India accounting for $300 billion of that deficit. Blockchain proponents argue tokenized trade finance—digitizing letters of credit, invoices, and collateral—could unlock capital for MSMEs trapped in paperwork limbo.
The current system remains archaic. A Tiruppur textile exporter shipping to Milan faces 7-10 days of manual LC processing across four banks, where even a misplaced comma can freeze payments. This inefficiency forces banks to over-collateralize loans and ration credit to established corporates, leaving smaller suppliers stranded.
Tokenization promises real-time, borderless funding by converting trade documents into on-chain assets. While no specific cryptocurrencies are named in the solution, the infrastructure WOULD likely leverage smart contract platforms capable of handling complex financial instruments at scale.