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Hawala Transactions: Working, Features & Impact

  • Context (IE): Hawala transactions linked to illegal activities in central India across Nepal & Myanmar.

What is Hawala?

  • An informal method of money transfer that operates without physical currency movement.
  • Based on trust, transactions occur through a network of intermediaries called hawaladars.
  • Functions outside traditional banking systems, making it difficult to track transactions.

Hawala

Source: WSM

Evolution

  • Originated in South Asia during the 8th century as a remittance mechanism.
  • Historically used for trade and finance before modern banking emerged.
  • Remains popular among expatriates in regions where formal banking is inaccessible or restricted.

How Hawala Works?

  1. Involves two hawaladars at different locations facilitating fund transfers without actual money movement.
  2. Example: A worker in Muscat deposits money with a hawaladar, receives a token, and shares it with the recipient in Lucknow, who collects an equivalent amount from another hawaladar.
  3. Settlement between hawaladars occurs later through cash, property, or service exchanges.

Key Features of Hawala

  • Trust-Based System: No legal documentation; transactions occur on mutual trust.
  • Anonymity: No official records, making it difficult to trace the money trail.
  • Cost-Effective: Lower fees than banks; often fee exemptions for expatriates.
  • Fast Transactions: Faster than conventional bank transfers, especially in underbanked regions.
  • Banned/Restricted: Many countries (eg-India), have outlawed hawala due to its unregulated nature.
  • Challenges in Regulation: Lack of formal records makes enforcement difficult; transactions often bypass financial oversight.

Who Uses Hawala?

  • Migrant Workers: Used for remittances in regions with poor banking infrastructure.
  • Traders: Used for cross-border trade in countries with strict financial regulations.
  • Sanctioned Nations: Individuals from restricted economies eg-Iran use hawala to bypass capital controls.
  • Illegal Networks: Terror financing, money laundering, drug trafficking exploit hawala’s anonymity.

Rising Nexus Between Cryptocurrency and Hawala

crypto and hawala

Reasons for Increasing Nexus

  • Outside the Formal Banking System: Both operate beyond the reach of regulated financial institutions, making transactions harder to detect.
  • Low Transaction Costs: Avoid high banking fees and currency conversion charges, making them attractive for illicit transfers.
  • Anonymity: Cryptocurrency uses encrypted keys and pseudonyms; hawala relies on informal trust and secret codes — both obscure the identities of users.
  • Lack of Transparency: Crypto transactions, though recorded on blockchain, remain anonymous. Hawala has no documentation at all.
  • Cross-border Operability: Enable quick and unregulated international money transfers, bypassing legal capital controls.
  • Unregulated Nature: In India, cryptocurrencies lack a comprehensive legal framework; hawala operates illegally or in legal grey zones.
  • Low Traceability: Transactions in both systems are hard to reverse or trace, complicating investigation and enforcement.

Implications for India

  • Internal Security Risk: Enables terror financing, organised crime, and illegal cross-border flows.
  • Economic Impact: Revenue loss through tax evasion and unreported transactions.
    • Undermines RBI’s monetary control and capital flow regulation.
  • Regulatory Challenges: Lack of a framework creates uncertainty for investors, traders, and enforcement.
  • Violation of Global Norms: Non-compliance with FATF’s AML-CFT (Anti-Money Laundering–Countering the Financing of Terrorism) standards.

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