Joe Nocera, Columnist

Pandemic Is a Great Incubator for Financial Fraud

Billions of taxpayer dollars are being funneled hastily through banks with looser regulations. What could possibly go wrong?

Some of this will end up in the wrong hands.

Photographer: Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images

Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

The Berkeley Center for Law and Business held its annual “fraud fest” a few weeks ago — virtually, of course — and there was a new item on the agenda. Along with the usual panels about whistle-blowers and short sellers, the organizers added a panel titled “Fraud and Covid-19.”

“The pandemic is the perfect storm for fraud,” one of the panelists said, and who can doubt it? The federal government hastily pushed hundreds of billions of dollars out the door in the largest bailout in U.S. history with only the most vague requirements for recipients; bankers working from home doled out those billions to small businesses; regulators loosened rules to help institutions get through the crisis. As my colleagues Timothy L. O’Brien and Nir Kaissar noted recently, “the White House has made it easier for government insiders to obtain bailout loans from the Small Business Administration, creating a raft of conflicts of interest.”