International Development Economics
Associates (IDEAs) hosted a two day workshop on the
theme of 'Financial Crime and Fragility under Financial
Globalisation'. The workshop was meant for about 40
participants.
The 2 day workshop was held as part
of series of intensive workshops on topical themes
organized by Ideas towards promoting dissemination
and application of critical analysis of existing economic
policy frameworks and development of heterodox tools
of economic analysis appropriate for meeting the challenges
of a more sustainable, participatory and equitable
development process.
Financial
globalisation, and the wave of financial sector reform
that it has generated, seeks to homogenise financial
structure across the globe. The justification for
this process of internationalising versions of the
so-called Anglo-Saxon financial system is that it
is efficient, rule-based, transparent and less prone
to failure. What is more, the suggestion is that if
countries approximate this ideal structure, a minimal
degree of prudential regulation (in the form of capital
adequacy norms, accounting standards, disclosure requirements,
etc.) would be adequate to ensure healthy financial
markets. In practice, however, evidence of successful
and unsuccessful attempts by agents to circumvent
regulation is routinely reported. In fact, a substantial
part of what is termed “financial innovation” (as
in the area of derivatives trading) is merely an attempt
to evade regulatory scrutiny and control. Further,
instances of conflicts of interest, insider trading,
accounting frauds and market manipulation are an abiding
features of the system, threatening in some cases
the viability of institutions too large to rescue.
The workshop was hence geared towards examining whether
financial crimes of varying intensity are the rule
rather than the exception and whether, institutionally
speaking, the currently dominant “ideal” financial
structure and the regulatory forbearance it incorporates
is inherently fragile and prone to systemic failure
in which case various proposals for drawing contours
of an alternative were to be discussed and debated
upon.
The
workshop was meant for intensive discussions around
a specialized theme with experts from representative
groups. It consisted of four sessions arranged thematically
and divided over a period of two days. In keeping
with IDEAS vision of bringing together academicians,
policy analysts, students and activists to work on
a feasible and long term development strategy for
the south, participants were drawn from varied
locations and included academicians, activists, researchers
and students, most of them working around issues relating
to growth and development policy analysis and intervention.
The resource persons included well known specialists
working in diverse areas such as global economic inequality
as in the case of Prof. James Galbraith to those dealing
with the political economy of law and crime such as
Prof.William Black, to noted heterodox macroeconomists
like Prof.Prabhat Patnaik, Prof. Amiya Bagchi and
Prof. C P Chandrasekhar. Other members of this eclectic
mix included Dr. Costas Lapavitsas from the School
of African and Oriental Studies, Kannan Srinivasan(
researcher and ex senior editor from the leading Indian
daily The Indian Express), Prof. Jayati Ghosh (Professor
of Economics, Centre for Economic Studies and Planning,
JNU and executive secretary, IDEAS), Prof Nirmal Chandra
(Professor of Economics, Indian Institute of Management,
Kolkata) Prabir Purkayastha (engineer and a science
activist in the power, telecom and software sectors),
financial activist cum lawyer Arun Agarwal and Girish
Sant, an activist based at Prayaas, an NGO working
on power sector reforms. The various presentations
made, followed by interactive discussions, were as
follows:
- 'Global Inequality and Global Finance' by James.
K. Galbraith (Lloyd M. Bentsen Jr. Chair in Government/Business
Relations and Professor of Government, University
of Texas, Austin. He also directs the University
of Texas Inequality Project, an informal research
group based at the LBJ School.)
- When Fragile becomes Friable: Endemic Control
Fraud as a Cause of Economic Stagnation and Collapse'
by William Black (Executive Director, Institute
for Fraud Prevention, University
of Texas, Austin.)
- 'On
Some Implications of Financial Liberalisation' by
Prof.
Prabhat Patnaik
(Professor of Economics, Centre for Economic Studies
and Planning, JNU)
- 'Financial
Liberalisation and Financial Fraud: Revisiting the
1990s' by Prof.
C.P.Chandrashekhar
(Professor of Economics, Centre for Economic Studies
and Planning, JNU)
- 'Economic
and Non economic Factors in the Credit Allocation
Process of Turkish Banks' by
Costas Lapavitsas
(Department of Economics School of Oriental and
African Studies, University of London )
- 'Vulnerability
of Power Sector from Financial Globalisation' by
Girish
Sant
(activist, Prayaas, a Pune based NGO, working extensively
on privatization of and malpractices in the power
sector)
- 'Neoliberal
Imperialism, Corporate Feudalism and the Contemporary
Origins of Dirty Money’ by
Prof. Amiya Bagchi
(Director, Institute of Development Studies, Kolkata)
- 'Economic
Growth, financial globalisation and low CPI (Corruption
Perception Index)' by
Arun K Agrawal
( financial analyst, Lawyer and activist working
on various cases of corporate financial frauds in
India.)
-
'Money Laundering and Capital Flight'
by
Kannan Srinivasan
(Monash Asia Institute, Monash University, Melbourne
Australia.)
This
was followed by a panel discussion where the issues
raised, the systemic problems identified which leave
the global economy increasingly vulnerable to financial
fragility and endemic frauds, as well as alternative
regulatory policy frameworks were discussed and debated
upon. Their was a wide ranging and lively discussion
on various aspects including several questions from
the floor. The participants generally agreed that
it was a fruitful learning exercise and was a step
forward towards pooling of expertise and information
from divergent groups.
Programme
Registration: 9.30 am,
19th December,
Workshop Timing:10 am
to 5.30 pm
Time |
Speaker |
Title |
Moderator |
Day 1: 19th
December |
Session
I Morning |
10 to 11.30 am |
James Galbraith |
'Modern Economic Predation:
War, Corporate Fraud, Labor Market Reform' |
Jayati Ghosh |
|
P Patnaik |
To be given later |
|
11.30 to 12. pm |
Tea Break |
12 pm to 1 pm |
Bill Black |
'When Fragile becomes Friable:
Endemic Control Fraud as a Cause of Economic
Stagnation and Collapse' |
Sushil Khanna |
1 to 2 pm |
Lunch Break
|
Session
II Afternoon |
2 pm to 3.30 pm |
C P Chandrasekhar |
'Financial Liberalisation
and Crime: Revisiting the 1992 Stock Scam' |
Sunanda Sen |
|
Costas Lapavitsas |
'Economic and Non economic
Factors in the Credit Allocation Process of
Turkish Banks' |
|
3.30 pm to 4 pm |
Tea Break |
4 pm to 5.30 pm |
Amiya Bagchi |
'Neoliberal Imperialism,
Corporate Feudalism and the Contemporary Origins
of Dirty Money' |
Prasenjit Bose |
|
Kannan Srinivasan |
'Money Laundering and Capital
Flight' |
|
|
Day
2: 20th December |
Session
I Morning |
10 to 11.30 am |
Arun K Agrawal |
'Economic Growth, financial
globalisation and low CPI (Corruption Perception
Index)' |
Prabir Purokayasthya |
|
Kavaljit Singh |
'Financial Liberalization,
Offshore Financial Centres and Financial Crime'
|
|
11.30 to 12. pm |
Tea Break |
12 pm to 1 pm |
Dipankar Mukherji |
To be given later |
Sukumar Muralidharan |
1 to 2 pm |
Lunch Break
|
Session
II Afternoon |
2 pm to 3.30 pm |
Girish Sant |
'Vulnerability of Power
Sector from Financial Globalisation' |
|
|
Ajit Singh's paper to be
presented by Partha Pratim Pal |
'Shareholder Value Maximisation,
Stock Market and New Technology: Should the
US Corporate Model be the Universal Standard?'
|
|
3.30 pm to 4 pm |
Tea Break |
4 pm to 5.30 pm |
Panel
Discussion
Chalapati Rao
Bill Black
Nirmal Chandra
Jayati Ghosh
Sunanda Sen
Prabir Purokayasthya
Sushil Khanna |
'Financial Crime and Fragility
under Financial Globalisation' |
|
February 7,
2006.
|