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The Great Indian Fraud

The Great Indian Fraud

Serious Frauds Which Shook the Economy
by Smarak Swain 2020 292 pages
4.21
50+ ratings
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Key Takeaways

1. Financial frauds exploit systemic loopholes and recur despite regulations

Financial frauds are cheat codes that can undermine a free market economy.

Systemic vulnerabilities: Financial frauds exploit gaps in control systems, often arising from increasing complexity in financial transactions. New technologies and innovative financial tools introduce jargon that makes transactions less comprehensible, allowing fraudsters to hide liabilities and conceal sham transactions.

Regulatory challenges: Despite efforts to tighten norms after each major fraud, similar schemes recur due to the ruptured regulatory cycle. The time gap between innovation introduction and regulatory response has widened, allowing fraudsters to stay ahead of the law. This cycle perpetuates as:

  • New technological and financial innovations emerge
  • Scamsters identify and exploit loopholes
  • Regulators attempt to institute control measures
  • New innovations restart the cycle before effective regulation

Economic impact: Serious frauds have far-reaching consequences:

  • Erosion of trust in financial markets
  • Increased cost of raising loans for genuine businesses
  • Economic rupture in cases of widespread fraud
  • Calls for greater government interference, potentially stifling free markets

2. Loan frauds use complex corporate structures to siphon funds

Mehta convinced lender banks to transfer loans to him under an understanding that he would transfer the amount to borrower banks and get a receipt from the borrower banks. He diverted these funds to the stock market.

Modus operandi: Loan frauds often involve:

  • Creating a web of shell companies to obscure fund movement
  • Over-invoicing imports or under-invoicing exports
  • Using related party transactions to siphon funds
  • Manipulating financial statements to show inflated profits

Case studies:

  • Vijay Mallya: Used Kingfisher Airlines as a vehicle to obtain loans, which were then diverted to other ventures
  • Nirav Modi: Exploited Letters of Undertaking (LoUs) from Punjab National Bank to obtain overseas loans without collateral
  • IL&FS: Used complex corporate structures to hide bad loans and continue borrowing

Detection challenges:

  • High volume of transactions makes tracing fund movement difficult
  • Corporate veils and offshore entities obscure true ownership
  • Collusion between borrowers and bank officials can bypass internal controls

3. Securities fraud manipulates market information and price discovery

Pump and dump was not a new scheme at the time. It was used in stock markets at least a century before that.

Common techniques:

  • Insider trading: Using non-public information for trading advantage
  • Price manipulation: Artificially inflating or deflating stock prices
  • Volume manipulation: Creating false impression of market activity
  • Misrepresentation: Providing false or misleading information to investors

Notable cases:

  • Harshad Mehta: Used interbank loans to pump money into select stocks
  • Ketan Parekh: Manipulated prices of selected stocks (K-10 stocks) using circular trading and borrowed funds
  • Satyam scandal: Inflated profits and fabricated bank balances to boost stock price

Regulatory response:

  • Establishment of SEBI as the market regulator
  • Introduction of stringent disclosure norms and insider trading regulations
  • Use of technology for market surveillance and fraud detection

4. Export-import frauds abuse trade policies and financial instruments

Diamonds are ideal goods for misinvoicing as they can be valued way above or below the fair market price.

Common schemes:

  • Over-invoicing imports or under-invoicing exports to move funds across borders
  • Circular trading to claim export incentives repeatedly
  • Misusing Letters of Credit (LCs) and other trade finance instruments
  • Origin fraud to evade duties or circumvent trade restrictions

Impact on economy:

  • Loss of revenue to the government through duty evasion
  • Distortion of trade statistics affecting policy decisions
  • Undermining of domestic industries through unfair competition
  • Facilitation of money laundering and terror financing

Challenges in prevention:

  • Difficulty in verifying true value of goods, especially intangibles
  • Limited cooperation between countries in sharing trade information
  • Complexity of global supply chains making tracking difficult

5. Creative accounting masks financial realities and inflates valuations

Accounts no longer give you a true picture of a business. Value has become a subjective construct.

Common techniques:

  • Revenue recognition manipulation
  • Expense capitalization or deferral
  • Off-balance sheet financing
  • Related party transactions to inflate profits

Motivations:

  • Meeting investor expectations and stock price targets
  • Securing better terms for loans or investments
  • Personal gain through performance-linked bonuses
  • Hiding financial distress or fraud

Detection challenges:

  • Complexity of modern financial instruments
  • Subjective nature of valuation for intangible assets
  • Limited scope of audits in uncovering well-concealed frauds

6. Pyramid and Ponzi schemes prey on human greed and ignorance

Pyramid schemes have assumed huge proportions after escaping the long arm of the law, even when some customers have accused them of fraud.

Mechanism:

  • Promise of high returns with little or no risk
  • Payments to earlier investors made from funds of new investors
  • Exponential growth required to sustain the scheme

Social impact:

  • Disproportionately affects low-income and financially illiterate groups
  • Erodes trust within communities as schemes often spread through social networks
  • Can lead to financial ruin and even suicides when schemes collapse

Challenges in prevention:

  • Schemes often disguise themselves as legitimate multi-level marketing businesses
  • Online platforms allow for rapid spread and global reach
  • Lack of financial literacy among general population

7. Shell companies and tax havens facilitate global financial crimes

Tax havens are haven for all kinds of dirty money.

Functions of shell companies:

  • Layering transactions to obscure source of funds
  • Providing anonymity to beneficial owners
  • Facilitating tax evasion and money laundering
  • Enabling round-tripping of funds

Role of tax havens:

  • Offering low or zero tax rates
  • Providing strict banking secrecy
  • Allowing opaque corporate structures
  • Resisting international cooperation in financial investigations

Global impact:

  • Facilitation of corruption and organized crime
  • Erosion of tax base for developing countries
  • Distortion of global investment flows
  • Undermining of financial regulations and fair competition

8. Technology enables new fraud methods but also aids detection

Neural networks and AI algorithms have managed to predict frauds from financial statements with reasonable accuracy.

New frontiers of fraud:

  • Cryptocurrency scams and Initial Coin Offering (ICO) frauds
  • High-frequency trading manipulation
  • Cyber attacks on financial institutions
  • Identity theft and synthetic identity fraud

Technological tools for fraud prevention:

  • Big data analytics for anomaly detection
  • Artificial Intelligence for pattern recognition
  • Blockchain for transparent and immutable record-keeping
  • Biometrics for enhanced authentication

Challenges:

  • Keeping pace with rapidly evolving technologies
  • Balancing innovation with regulation
  • Protecting privacy while enhancing surveillance
  • Addressing the global nature of tech-enabled frauds

9. Effective fraud prevention requires proactive laws and global cooperation

Clear laws and effective law enforcement are important for effective deterrence. However, law-making should be proactive, not reactive.

Key strategies:

  • Adopting a 'whole-of-government approach' to tackle financial crimes
  • Enhancing international cooperation in investigation and asset recovery
  • Strengthening whistleblower protection and incentives
  • Investing in financial literacy and public awareness programs

Regulatory challenges:

  • Balancing fraud prevention with ease of doing business
  • Addressing jurisdictional issues in cross-border frauds
  • Keeping pace with financial innovations and new business models
  • Avoiding over-regulation that could stifle economic growth

Future directions:

  • Development of real-time fraud detection systems
  • Integration of fraud prevention into financial product design
  • Enhancing collaboration between public and private sectors
  • Continuous updating of laws to address emerging fraud typologies

Last updated:

Review Summary

4.21 out of 5
Average of 50+ ratings from Goodreads and Amazon.

The Great Indian Fraud receives high praise for its comprehensive exploration of financial frauds in India. Readers commend the author's ability to explain complex schemes in simple terms, covering various types of fraud with real-world examples. The book is lauded for its insightful analysis of fraud mechanisms, historical context, and impact on the economy. Many reviewers appreciate the author's storytelling skills and the book's educational value. Some criticisms include the exclusion of certain politically sensitive scams and the use of simplistic graphics. Overall, readers find it informative, eye-opening, and highly relevant.

Your rating:

About the Author

Smarak Swain is an Indian author and serving revenue official known for his expertise in financial fraud investigation. His book "The Great Indian Fraud" demonstrates his ability to simplify complex financial concepts for a general audience. Swain's writing style is praised for being clear, engaging, and informative. He draws on his professional experience to provide detailed insights into various types of economic frauds and their impact on the Indian economy. Swain's work is recognized for its educational value, offering readers a comprehensive understanding of financial misconduct and its prevention. His approach combines historical context with contemporary examples, making the subject matter accessible and relevant to a wide range of readers.

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