Outlook Outlook English, 26 February 2018 | Page 3
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Volume LVIII, No. 8
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Rajesh Ramachandran
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Published for the week of February 20-26, 2018
Released on February 17, 2018
Total no. of pages 84, Including Covers
Nirav Modi
A
ll that sparkles is often an ugly, behind-the-counter scam. And this counter
is mostly likely an extension of a paan-stained public sector bank employee’s
cabin. The latest banking scandal—the beauty of it is its simplicity—is a
throwback to the Harshad Mehta fraud involving banks, particularly the
State Bank of India. Any audaciously rewarding enterprise ought to be s imple
and government-funded. Nirav Modi got a lowly deputy manager, Gokulnath
Shetty, at Punjab National Bank’s Fountain Branch in Mumbai to authenticate let-
ters of undertaking or bank guarantees, using which he raised Rs 11,000 crore and
took a non-stop flight to the Forbes’ list of billionaires. As simple as that!
What struck me most about Nirav Modi was not his diamonds. I always had a
healthy disdain for diamonds because you need to have a minimum bank balance to
like diamonds, however tiny. Intellectual contempt for wealth and its manifesta-
tions are often a loser’s way of coping with a penurious life. Yet, Nirav Modi’s story
triggered a brain rush. Nirav (if I may) is
roughly my age. He also left his home early
in his life, learnt the tricks of his trade in
his twenties in Mumbai, then got his name
written on billboards and made stars—for-
eign and desi—walk up and down his ramp
as many times as he wanted. I too landed in
Delhi in my twenties and thought I also
learnt a few tricks (like writing stuff that
would get Parliament adjourned or make
the LoP move a no-confidence motion).
Now I realise, that’s not how it works. I
wasn’t good enough to get loans ever from
a PSU bank. And instead of round-tripping
those I got from private banks, I always ended up repaying them. So, in a way I am
not far removed from that farmer who looks at the pesticide bottle as his insurance
against insolvency. To succeed in life, one needs to know the behind-the-counter
babu, take loans in thousands of crores, dictate the terms of repayment, then renege
on those very terms, buy residency in the UK and then talk about banking reforms.
So, I am clearly not qualified to write about banking reforms. But I am awestruck.
All you need is a Gokulnath Shetty to rob several banks off a billion US dollars or two.
And the scam can remain undetected for seven long years. Do we really need such
public sector banks? The great votaries of PSU banks always talk about access to
banking, credit, serving the poor...all those sad pseudo-socialist slogans. But what
really is on offer at these PSU banks is access to fraud for scamsters by corrupt offi-
cials. And there is no dearth of money that is extracted from clueless creditors by
way of interest on loans and filched from thrifty depositors on account of transac-
tion charges and penalties. Then there are the sanctimonious unions collectively
badgering the customers and the government. It is time to call the banking bluff.
Then we don’t expect our political class to rein in these financial fraudsters. Be
they the cooperative bank scamsters of Maharashtra or the chit fund frauds of West
Bengal, the powerless poor get robbed all the time. After all, ours is a country that
had a brilliant finance minister who wanted to dip into the Employees Provident
Fund and the Life Insurance Corporation to repay Enron’s foreign debts. To be fair
to him, it has to be said that he kept himself away from the crucial meeting because
he was earlier Enron’s lawyer.
Rajesh Ramachandran
26 February 2018 Outlook 3