As smartphones penetrate through the country, apps are getting more and more localised, democratised.
When the common Ram-Rita become comfortable with a new tool, it becomes ripe for misuse.
My hunch is that enterprising shadow banking entrepreneurs must have already commissioned college dropouts and Bill Gates wannabes to writes codes for that killer app that would woo people at large into parting with their cash.
It has always been so.
From Charles Ponzi’s time, the legendary American who gave these schemes their name, gifted communicators have been able to tap at the ubiquitous human weakness of greed by often selling them the dream of becoming rich, quick.
They typically sell some vague financial concepts as high return-earning and act as a hub, interacting with individual investors directly.
The pyramid variant uses the early investors to get more, the returns linked to how many new investors one is able to bring in.
The underlying concept has remained uncorrupt. Only the tools and instruments have changed over the years.
Land and housing have often been useful components to build a Ponzischeme in India, largely because of the unregulated nature of the sector and the fact that it has a free flow of unaccounted money.
Of late, people had begun experimenting with exotic platforms such as rearing of emus, buffaloes and even goats.
Ponzis have also used debentures, shares, certificates, magazine subscriptions,
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