
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Perhaps the most striking feature of the global financial crisis has been that no top banking executive has been successfully prosecuted for their role in bringing it about in the first place. The period covered by the statute of limitations is running out so it is conceivable none ever will. Yet the word 'fraud' appears 157 times in the final report of the US Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission. So why are we not seeing prosecutions and prison terms, as in previous financial scandals? Guests include a former prosecutor, a law professor, an economist and a recently-retired US Senator.
(Image: Shutterstock - Val Lawless)
By BBC World Service4.6
695695 ratings
Perhaps the most striking feature of the global financial crisis has been that no top banking executive has been successfully prosecuted for their role in bringing it about in the first place. The period covered by the statute of limitations is running out so it is conceivable none ever will. Yet the word 'fraud' appears 157 times in the final report of the US Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission. So why are we not seeing prosecutions and prison terms, as in previous financial scandals? Guests include a former prosecutor, a law professor, an economist and a recently-retired US Senator.
(Image: Shutterstock - Val Lawless)

7,784 Listeners

377 Listeners

526 Listeners

896 Listeners

1,068 Listeners

304 Listeners

5,478 Listeners

1,823 Listeners

971 Listeners

590 Listeners

2,117 Listeners

361 Listeners

976 Listeners

406 Listeners

428 Listeners

227 Listeners

851 Listeners

334 Listeners

362 Listeners

74 Listeners

480 Listeners

370 Listeners

233 Listeners

984 Listeners

326 Listeners

3,219 Listeners

67 Listeners

839 Listeners

554 Listeners

624 Listeners

361 Listeners

269 Listeners

60 Listeners

76 Listeners

3 Listeners