The diffusion of blockchain is intensifying globally. This was
evident last week during the virtual
launch of a report titled ‘Blockchain for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and Entrepreneurs in Italy’ by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
launch of a report titled ‘Blockchain for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and Entrepreneurs in Italy’ by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
Speakers at the launch acknowledged the growing
need to enhance transparency, safety, traceability and efficiency as
important to national competitiveness of the country’s large,
diversified and export oriented industrial base. They emphasised that
Italy is well positioned to leverage the potential of distributed ledger
technologies (DLTs) for her competitiveness.
The
potential of blockchain for SMEs lies in four areas: access to finance
such as syndicated loans; financing through tokenisation and crypto
assets; trade facilitation especially in trade financing; logistics and
shipping as well as custom processes.
Other areas are
global supply chain management focusing on the visibility of the supply
chain and verification of authenticity; and innovation in business
models as the adoption of industry 4.0 starts particularly of the
technologies that will drive it such as Internet of Things (IoT) and
artificial intelligence as well as advanced manufacturing.
With
the technology, the country hopes to strengthen the competitiveness of
Made in Italy. The country is among the top three economies impacted by
counterfeiting and piracy activities after the US and France.
The report notes that industries, which are characterised by a
large population of SMEs in Italy, are particularly affected most, with
estimated losses of 3.75 billion euros. Overall losses to counterfeits
amount to an estimated 24 billion euros, or 3.2 percent of the total
sales in 2016. Blockchain is to play a key role in dealing with the
menace.
Authors of the report noted that blockchain
solutions demonstrate strong potential of serving sectors of the Italian
economy that are dominated by SMEs. One of its potential is in value
chains, where it can guarantee provenance, transportation, handling,
storage and in general supply chain management, agri-food “from farm to
fork” process as well as the advanced industries leveraging additive
manufacturing/3D printing.
They, however, recognise
that there are important policy challenges to be addressed in order to
fully take advantage of this technological transition, specifically in
relation to the uptake of digital technologies by SMEs.
It
was noted that the evolution of the regulatory framework at Italian and
European Union levels is fundamental to further development of the
technologies. Some of the key regulatory areas include: the complex
regulation pertaining the use of DLTs and the lack of a clear picture on
the possible public financing opportunities, and the lack of the full
legal recognition of smart contracts, which limit companies from
unleashing their innovation potential.
The other
regulatory concern was the difficult procedure for the management and
storage of hash codes in distributed public and private ledgers in
compliance with General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which hinders
innovation. Practitioners participating at the launch called for the
creation of legal sandboxes to deal with many of these regulatory
challenges.
There
are many lessons to learn from Italy’s bold move to embrace this
emerging technology for national competitiveness and the development of
their SMEs. Italians are not sitting and waiting that change and
progress will come like magic. Like good entrepreneurs, they are leading
the pack to create new solutions while dealing with some of their
problems like counterfeits.
Italians are closely
following the footsteps of Israel to become one of the leading economies
in the Industry 4.0 technologies. It is not too difficult for a
developing country like Kenya to join the league of nations leading the
way for the adoption of emerging technologies. However, that will not
happen if the regulatory environment is not supportive.
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