It could happen to you: introducing “Scam Inc”

它可能发生在你身上:揭秘“诈骗公司”

The Intelligence from The Economist

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2025-02-07

24 分钟
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Our new podcast series is a shocking look at transnational organised crime: nearly as big as the illegal-drug trade and far more sophisticated than you might think. Beware. After a week that started with bold tariff moves by the Trump administration, what can be gleaned from how things progressed (09:20)? And a staid, ancient game gets a glitzy modern makeover (16:20).
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  • The Economist.

  • Hello and welcome to The Intelligence from The Economist.

  • I'm Jason Palmer.

  • And I'm Rosie Bloor.

  • Every weekday we provide a fresh perspective on the event shaping your world.

  • We started the week with some startling moves on tariffs by the Trump administration.

  • After some serious paroxysms of the markets, the scene is already very different.

  • We ask what's to be learned from all that White House whiplash.

  • And strap yourself in for some glitzy sporting action today.

  • There'll be tension, there'll be expert analysis,

  • there'll be top flight players battling it out with dramatic voiceovers.

  • It'll be chess.

  • But first...

  • In parts of Thailand this week,

  • panicked residents queued for fuel after the authorities deliberately cut off power in several towns on the country's eastern fringe.

  • Thailand's Prime Minister has self-authorised the move.

  • It was an extraordinary measure designed to curb an extraordinary industry.

  • Workers at SCAM centres operating just over the border in neighbouring Myanmar have been conning people into fake investment schemes.

  • But the problem isn't limited to remote border towns.

  • All over the world, there are SCAM compounds like these, stealing billions of dollars.