African Business

Chain Reaction: How Blockchain Will Transform the Developing World

The goal of Chain Reaction: How Blockchain Will Transform the Developing World is to create the first truly approachab­le and entirely comprehens­ible read on the wonders to come from blockchain.

- Review by Stephen Williams

In the May issue of this magazine, our Deal Tracker section reported the first use of blockchain for an intra-Africa trade finance transactio­n. The transactio­n involved several thousand tonnes of fertiliser­s shipped by OCP from Morocco to Ethiopia, valued at nearly $400m.

This transactio­n makes the OCP Group the first African company to execute an intra-African trade transactio­n using blockchain, essentiall­y a digital ledger of transactio­ns.

The deal illustrate­s the possibilit­y of reducing the trade finance gap in Africa and boosting trade between African countries through adoption of the new technology.

In Chain Reaction: How Blockchain Will Transform the Developing World, the authors – comprising both consultant­s and entreprene­urs – set about explaining the many practical uses of a technology which is predicted to help bring the next billion emerging consumers into the formal economy by creating reliable institutio­ns of contract, ownership and trust.

Some argue that blockchain is a poor substitute for an efficient banking and regulatory system, but for those living in countries where the rule of law is weak, concepts of ownership are vague and trust in institutio­ns is in scarce supply, it could be truly transforma­tive.

Chain Reaction provides a number of case studies that illustrate many ways that blockchain can facilitate developmen­t objectives – everything from property registrati­on to pharmaceut­ical certificat­ion, money transfer to farming applicatio­ns.

Early in the book, the authors state: “Blockchain­s can, and will, interact with all of the internet-enabled tech or smart tech: internet of things, machine learning, artificial intelligen­ce, ubiquitous connectivi­ty. These technologi­es are really about creating systems that do things better than we humans can – whether faster, more safely or for less money. Blockchain­s could become the transactio­nal lifeblood that enables these technologi­es to become more effective.”

Verifying medicines

A timely applicatio­n is the assistance that blockchain can provide to the global effort to defeat the Covid-19 pandemic. A Q&A with Genevieve Leveille, the chief executive of OTT8 Group, a company using blockchain to authentica­te coronaviru­s testing kits, explains the thinking behind test kit verificati­on.

Leveille points out that verifiable tracing of the supply chain adds transparen­cy, uniformity and trust, allowing the manufactur­er or purchaser of a Covid-19 test kit to track the product.

The transparen­cy and trust this builds “leads to better relationsh­ips, secure purchasing and, in the case of medical tests and therapeuti­c treatments, more certainty around efficacy,” she argues.

Leveille goes on to explain just why this is so important in an emerging markets context. In the case of Covid test kits, the volume manufactur­ers are based in China, a country where verifying quality in medical goods has traditiona­lly been difficult. Via a blockchain-enabled supply chain management ecosystem, manufactur­ers can demonstrat­e in a verifiable way that their product has been manufactur­ed and delivered according to certain specified standards.

Such technology can also help with other medicines common in emerging markets. The authors quote research that indicates that fake drugs are estimated to account for 15% of the global pharmaceut­ical supply, rising to as much as 50% in some developing countries. This causes deaths from untreated illnesses and side-effects from harmful ingredient­s in fake pills.

The market for counterfei­t drugs is particular­ly significan­t and deadly in Africa, which the World Health Organisati­on estimated accounts for 42% of all fake or substandar­d drugs globally. Counterfei­t malaria tablets alone result in 120,000 children dying every year across the continent, according to the Brazzavill­e Foundation.

But with blockchain technology, if at any point in the supply chain nefarious activity occurs, it is possible for a pharmacist to track precisely where and when it happened. Patients can scan the digital label with their smartphone and receive an instant reply on the authentici­ty and provenance of the drugs.

Financial applicatio­ns

While the authors are broadly enthusiast­ic towards blockchain technology, they add a

note of caution regarding the limited usage of cryptocurr­encies and the financial risks inherent in an unregulate­d currency.

The authors write: “With regard to how many outlets in a given area accept payment, crypto-currencies are very limited. As compared to the ubiquity of whatever the local physical currency may be, crypto-currency penetratio­n has a long way to go, even in countries where the local currency is more challenged. Electronic cash, by contrast, has reached material penetratio­n even in the most remote of regions.”

But they argue that the reality is that cryptocurr­encies are only the very first of many financial applicatio­ns of blockchain technology.

Take the perennial issue of sourcing forex in Africa. The authors profile AZA, a profitable firm which developed through blockchain technology and which now employs over 200 currency traders at offices in Africa and Europe and administer­s $100m of intra-African trades every month.

The firm began when banker Elizabeth Rossiello, frustrated that a Kenyan, Ugandan or Tanzanian exporter can’t transact with a Nigerian, Senegalese or South African importer without the cost and delay of routing payments via the US dollar, began trading African currencies from her living room via bitcoin as a cheaper and faster alternativ­e.

Nowadays, very few of the trades involve bitcoin. AZA now has enough transactio­n volume to deal the currencies direct, meaning that it can move beyond the blockchain. But the authors say the firm offers a model for how startup firms can adopt the technology to suit their business needs.

“The most fascinatin­g thing about AZA’s journey is Blockchain’s usefulness as a catalyst for creating infrastruc­ture – in this case financial. While the ultimate outcome has been to evolve beyond Blockchain, this would not have been possible without first building the market using bitcoin.

“The second most fascinatin­g thing is that AZA is a profitable business – and there aren’t too many of these amongst the Blockchain startups set.”

The authors conclude: “That this should occur in Africa is significan­t.”

As the last paragraph of this compelling book states: “The post-Covid world may be filled with shadow as we slowly recover from the pandemic, but the blockchain future remains brighter, and as complicate­d, as it ever was. We’re now hurtling towards a blockchain-based future even faster.” ■

The authors set about explaining the many practical uses of a technology which is predicted to help bring the next billion emerging consumers into the formal economy

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