Published on: August 8, 2025

TACKLING MONEY LAUNDERING IN INDIA

TACKLING MONEY LAUNDERING IN INDIA

NEWS

  • According to a Rajya Sabha report, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) has taken up 5,892 cases under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002 since 2015.
  • However, only 15 convictions have been secured, highlighting:
    • A poor conviction rate.
    • Increasing money laundering cases, indicating weak enforcement of financial crime laws.

HIGHLIGHTS

What is Money Laundering?

  • Defined under Section 3 of the PMLA, money laundering involves:
    • Concealing, possessing, acquiring, or using money obtained from criminal activity.
    • Projecting such proceeds as untainted or legitimate.

Three Stages of Money Laundering

  1. Placement:
    • Introduction of illicit funds into the financial system.
  2. Layering:
    • Hiding the source through complex or multiple transactions to obscure the trail.
  3. Integration:
    • Reintroducing the ‘cleaned’ money into the economy via:
      • Real estate
      • Business investments
      • Luxury assets

Key Issues & Legal Challenges

  • Extremely low conviction rate under PMLA undermines deterrence.
  • Supreme Court ruling (Vijay Madanlal Chaudhary vs Union of India, 2022):
    • Held that no FIR is required before initiating action under Section 3 of PMLA.
    • Expanded ED’s investigative powers—raising due process and misuse concerns.
  • Allegations of political misuse of ED powers further weaken public trust in enforcement.

Role of FATF & DTAA

  • India is obligated to follow Financial Action Task Force (FATF) guidelines to:
    • Enhance financial transparency.
    • Prevent money laundering and terrorist financing.
  • India has signed Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAA) with over 80 countries, which:
    • Help in tracking cross-border fund flows.
    • Require stronger implementation to be effective.