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Book review: Cautionary tales and takeaways

Cooking the books, banking deceits, Ponzi schemes... 'Corporate Frauds' delves into why rich people commit fraud and how some of the biggest cases have changed the way India does business.

April 24, 2022 / 20:50 IST
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(Representational image) Instead of going into salacious details or gossip, the book focuses on explaining how systems have evolved in response to economic crimes.
(Representational image) Instead of going into salacious details or gossip, the book focuses on explaining how systems have evolved in response to economic crimes.

Why do rich and powerful people commit acts of fraud? Are they driven by insatiable greed, or is it a momentary lapse of judgement that makes them deceive others? Do their actions simply come from over-confidence, or perhaps a belief that they can escape all consequences? Can we see look at these events through an economic lens instead of a moral or ethical one?

If these questions interest you, read Robin Banerjee’s book Corporate Frauds: Business Crimes Now Bigger, Broader, Bolder (SAGE India, 2022). He is the MD and CEO of Caprihans India Ltd. He has written two books earlier – Who Cheats and How? Scams, Fraud and the Dark Side of the Corporate World (2015) and Who Blunders and How: The Dumb Side of the Corporate World (2019). The underbelly of corporate India is his writerly playground. 

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Corporate Frauds has 12 chapters, excluding the introduction and epilogue. It classifies white-collar crimes that involve “violation of delegated trust” into many categories. Some of these are accounting artifice, banking deceits, Ponzi schemes, stock market swindles, corruption, insurance imposture, hiding shady wealth, impersonation, and cybercrimes. He does not glorify them as clever masterminds; he highlights their practices as bad for business.

How did Banerjee come to be so deeply interested in the subject of this book?