Briefing | Fighting corruption in India

A bad boom

Graft in India is damaging the economy. The country needs to get serious about dealing with it

IN THE early hours of February 20th 2010 Uday Vir Singh, an Indian forestry officer, bluffed his way past a private militia guarding a dusty port called Belekeri. For months suspicious-looking convoys of trucks had been thundering across India to the port’s quays on the country’s west coast, just south of the Goan beach where the super-spy mayhem which opened “The Bourne Supremacy” was filmed.

Mr Singh is no more a Jason Bourne than the next entomologist—he has a doctorate on metamorphosis in insects—and the infiltration he mounted with a few colleagues led to no gunplay. But it did uncover a massive scam, with hundreds of officials and politicians in the state of Karnataka in the pockets of an illegal mining mafia that, over five years, had made profits of $2 billion or more shipping illegal iron ore to China.

This article appeared in the Briefing section of the print edition under the headline "A bad boom"

The new age of crony capitalism

From the March 15th 2014 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Briefing

The world’s economic order is breaking down

Critics will miss globalisation when it is gone

America’s fiscal outlook is disastrous, but forgotten

On the campaign trail, both main candidates largely ignore the problem