Food trade corridors move products across jurisdictions through a chain of documentation — phytosanitary certificates, export permits, trade manifests, customs declarations, import clearances. This paper examines the structural gap between what trade documentation carries and what buyers at the destination need to understand about the product. Trade documentation confirms regulatory admissibility for movement. It does not carry producer-level product information — origin detail, production practices, compositional attributes, quality context, or health-relevant characteristics. The paper argues that product-level information is generated at source but does not travel through trade corridors in portable, reusable form.
Shams Ahmed (Mon,) studied this question.