I think India Inc is the cleanest place to do business in. No honestly; I can’t recall one reported case of corporate corruption in India this year. Not one. Well actually in November the CBI made several arrests in the bribes for loans case but that’s small stuff. Can you recall the last time any large well-known company in India was prosecuted for corruption? I can’t!
Now get this – the 2010 list of offenders under USA’s Foreign Corrupt Practices Act includes the BAE, Daimler, Alcatel Lucent, Royal Dutch Shell, Noble Corporation. Meanwhile, this year the UK passed its Bribery Act, that is wider in scope and tougher in punishment than even the FCPA. India too has a prevention of corruption act, but it lies unused. Wouldn’t it be ironical if a corrupt Indian company escapes Indian law but gets caught by foreign anti-corruption laws? Payaswini Upadhyay tells you why that’s an imminent possibility.
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In a country where the criminal code is over 150 years old and company and tax laws over 50, the prevention of corruption law enacted in 1988 qualifies as rather young.
The PCA is actually fairly broad and all encompassing. It primarily hits at government officials or public officials who obtain any sort of gratification for anything that they would do which would be rendering some service which is out of turn or getting something done for something which is out of turn or even not doing something that they are supposed to do or delaying a certain approval that they need to get going for somebody. So in that sense, it covers a lot. The focus has obviously been on ‘public officials’ but there is also an abettment provision whereby any ordinary person who is not a public official or public servant who abetts in public official doing something that he isn’t supposed to do, then even that person can be liable under the Prevention of Corruption Act.
And yet in the 22 years of its existence…it has rarely ever been applied!