Skip to main content
Banco Industrial do Brasil TFFP
Uncommitted credit line under TFFP for up to US$6 million

Project Detail

Country

Brazil

Project Number

BR-L1066

Approval Date

June 27, 2006

Project Status

Closed

Project Type

Loan Operation

Sector

TRADE

Subsector

TRADE ADJUSTMENT ASSISTANCE

Lending Instrument

BID Invest

Lending Instrument Code

IIC

Modality

TFP (Trade Finance Facilitation Guarantee)

Facility Type

-

Environmental Classification

-

Total Cost

USD 6,000,000.00

Country Counterpart Financing

USD 0.00

Original Amount Approved

USD 6,000,000.00

Financial Information
Operation Number Lending Type Reporting Currency Reporting Date Signed Date Fund Financial Instrument
1756/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
3668A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
3673A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
3705A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
3764A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
3774A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
3775A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
3912A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
4774A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
4834A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
4835A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
4837A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
4876A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
4910A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
4982A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
4998A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
5005A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
5007A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
5099A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
5120A/OC-BR Non-Sovereign Guaranteed USD - United States Dollar Ordinary Capital Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 1756/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 3668A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 3673A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 3705A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 3764A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 3774A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 3775A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 3912A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 4774A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 4834A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 4835A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 4837A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 4876A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 4910A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 4982A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 4998A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 5005A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 5007A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 5099A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Operation Number 5120A/OC-BR
  • Lending Type: Non-Sovereign Guaranteed
  • Reporting Currency: USD - United States Dollar
  • Reporting Date:
  • Signed Date:
  • Fund: Ordinary Capital
  • Financial Instrument: Private Sector Financing
Publications
Published 2020
Trade and Integration Monitor 2020: The COVID-19 Shock: Building Trade Resilience for After the Pandemic
The Trade and Integration Monitor 2020 analyzes how trade has contracted during the COVID-19 pandemic and focuses on the reforms needed to enable the region to take part in the trade and investment flows that will emerge after the crisis. Countries in the region should make decisive moves toward an ambitious agenda of international integration policies if they are to capture new investments and take advantage of nearshoring opportunities. The pandemic has exposed challenges that point clearly to a need to make headway on the institutional strengthening of export promotion and investment attraction agencies, trade facilitation and the modernization of customs, the diversification of the services sector, and trade digitalization.
Blogs
Published 2022
Como fazer uma gestão adequada do comércio popular nos espaços públicos?
O comércio popular no Brasil é uma atividade que movimenta milhares de brasileiros dentro dos espaços públicos, seja exercendo o papel de comerciante ou de cliente, e engloba o comércio ambulante, fixo, formal ou informal. Os desafios encarados tanto pelos comerciantes como pelos municípios no que diz respeito à gestão da atividade econômica nos espaços
Publications
Published 2022
Investment Booms and Institutions: Evidence for the World and the Andean Region
This paper provides evidence of a positive effect of institutions and reforms in initiating investment booms. We constructed an unbalanced panel of 178 countries for the period 19502019 that considered institutions and reforms at different levels and dimensions. We analyzed the effects of these variables on 159 carefully estimated investment boom episodes, controlling for the standard determinants of investment and using a battery of estimation techniques and robustness checks. Overall, marketoriented and democratic institutions favor the advent of investment booms. Structural reforms present mixed effects and in some cases these are nonlinear. While trade and capital account reform have negative effects, domestic finance, product, and labor market reforms have the opposite. Beyond institutions and reforms, we find different effects regarding external, macro, and structural variables.
Publications
Published 2023
El impacto de la ventanilla única para el registro formal de empresas en República Dominicana
Las ventanillas únicas para el registro de empresas pueden reducir significativamente los costos y mejorar el acceso a información para los negocios que entran al sector formal. En este documento se analiza el impacto de un programa a nivel nacional que comprende la implementación de una ventanilla única y la reducción de las tarifas de registro. Además de analizar su impacto en el número de empresas que se formalizan, se explora la manera en que este reconfigura el mercado laboral para mujeres y hombres. El estudio se lleva a cabo en República Dominicana, un país caracterizado por la alta informalidad empresarial y laboral, donde en 2013 el gobierno lanzó la ventanilla digital única Formalízate. Para analizar su impacto se aprovechó el despliegue secuencial del programa en diferentes provincias del país. Los resultados muestran que la introducción del programa en una provincia está asociada con la entrada de un mayor número de microempresas al mercado formal. Cabe señalar que estas empresas se concentran en sectores donde la informalidad era alta antes del despliegue de Formalízate, sobre todo en los sectores de comercio y turismo. Además, los resultados muestran que la participación de las mujeres en la fuerza laboral se ve afectada por el programa, mientras que la participación de los hombres no. De hecho, se observa que la presencia de Formalízate aumentó la participación de las mujeres en el mercado laboral como emprendedoras autoempleadas.
Blogs
Published 2023
Comercio para alimentar el mundo, una agenda estratégica para América Latina y el Caribe
América Latina y el Caribe (ALC) tiene una oportunidad única para atender el crecimiento esperado de la demanda agroalimentaria a nivel mundial.  La región representa el 14% de la producción mundial de alimentos y el 45% del comercio agroalimentario internacional neto[1]. Su importancia para sus propias economías es indiscutible: los sistemas agroalimentarios explican entre el
Publications
Published 2023
Connexa: No. 20: Dezembro, 2023: síntese trimestral de informação e dados sobre integração e comércio
Esta edição do Connexa apresenta um resumo do desempenho do setor externo da América Latina e Caribe (ALC) ao longo de 2023, detalhando o comportamento de variáveis chave para as exportações de bens, como preços dos produtos básicos, demanda global, fretes e taxas de câmbio. Da mesma forma, o comportamento do investimento direto estrangeiro é analisado. No campo dos acordos comerciais, apresenta-se o progresso da região nas negociações intra e extra-regionais.
Publications
Published 2024
Oportunidades para promover el comercio agroalimentario intrarregional en América Latina y el Caribe
El comercio internacional es fundamental para la seguridad alimentaria global y regional porque incrementa la eficiencia en la producción y permite a los consumidores acceder a una mayor variedad de alimentos por un menor precio. Para América Latina y el Caribe el comercio agrícola intrarregional es extremadamente relevante ya querepresentaba en 2021 el 24,4% de las ventas externas totales de bienes y el 9,5% de las compras al exterior.Este trabajo analiza el comercio intrarregional de agroalimentos de la región, evalúa sus alcances y límites y formula recomendaciones para aprovechar las oportunidades de expansión.
Publications
Published 2024
Oportunidades y desafíos del comercio agroalimentario entre los países del Sistema de la Integración Centroamericana y la Comunidad del Caribe
El comercio internacional es fundamental para la seguridad alimentaria global y regional porque incrementa la eficiencia en la producción y permite a los consumidores acceder a una mayor variedad de alimentos por un menor precio. Pese a la relativa cercanía de los países del Sistema de la Integración Centroamericana (SICA) y la Comunidad del Caribe (CARICOM), el comercio de productos agroalimentarios entre ambas regiones es relativamente bajo. Este trabajo tiene como objetivo identificar oportunidades para potenciar el comercio de productos agroalimentarios birregional con el fin de contribuir en la reducción de la inseguridad alimentaria, generar mayores fuentes de empleo, reactivar las economías y, en general, lograr mejores condiciones de vida.
Publications
Published 2024
Impactos indirectos de la inversión en infraestructura de transporte: una metodología para construir contrafactuales
El aporte al desarrollo de la inversión en infraestructura de transporte puede ser significativo, pero difícil de cuantificar. Los beneficios directos a los usuarios justifican inversiones en mejoras, pero no capturan la potencial contribución indirecta de estas mejoras en generar oportunidades de desarrollo económico y social derivadas del mayor intercambio comercial. La medición de estos impactos indirectos presenta importantes desafíos en la construcción de contrafactuales, pues se requiere comparar resultados a nivel agregado de sus efectos sobre el comercio, el ingreso, la población, la productividad, el atractivo del lugar y el bienestar de las personas. En años recientes la investigación académica ha venido desarrollando modelos económicos y métodos derivados de la física computacional que hacen posible medir estos efectos indirectos. El propósito de esta nota técnica es presentar estos modelos y mostrar su utilidad para evaluar el impacto indirecto de proyectos de mejoras de infraestructura de transporte. Para ilustrar la metodología presentamos una aplicación para el caso de la ampliación del Corredor del Pacífico.
Publications
Published 2023
Challenges in the Growth of Fiber in Latin America and the Caribbean
In the period from 2016 to 2021, the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) reported a four-fold increase in the number of households passed by fiber to the home (FTTH) and a rise of 10 times the number of subscribers to this technology. Estimated penetration towards the end of 2021 was 27 percent (46 million households) and is expected to reach 60 percent by 2030, when coverage will achieve the natural ceiling expected for the region of 81 percent of households. Having adequate fiber infrastructure will be key to introducing new digital technology solutions and accompanying the growth of 5G as well as the evolution of Wi-Fi 6 and 7 capable of supporting high levels of traffic and low latencies. This technological transition is taking place amidst an evolution in the connectivity infrastructure value chain, with a trend towards the vertical disintegration of traditional internet providers and towards more specialized infrastructure management, with InfraCos, NetCos, and Cloud- Cos as the necessary neutral partners of the final service providers. This paper analyzes these topics, bearing in mind the impact of digital infrastructure deployment on the digital transformation of the region's countries.
Powered by FindIT
Jump back to top