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Impact Report 2024-25
Annual Impact Report 2024-25
The Shadow Economy: Unmasking the Global Mechanics of Money Laundering
Money laundering is often seen as a distant, sophisticated crime, but it silently shapes global finance, fuels terrorism, and distorts economies. From shell companies and crypto wallets to false invoicing and deepfake identities, the methods have become smarter, faster, and harder to trace.
Despite strong laws and global frameworks, only a tiny fraction of illicit flows are ever detected. Regulatory gaps, weak data systems, and cross-border loopholes keep the shadow economy alive.
Money laundering isn’t just a financial crime; it’s a threat to governance, stability, and everyday economic fairness. Explore the full analysis in Madhav’s article.
Why are “Chips” the New Oil?
Semiconductors have quietly become the strategic backbone of the 21st century, powering everything from artificial intelligence and electric vehicles to defence, communication, and critical infrastructure. Their significance became undeniable when the global chip shortage revealed how dependent the world is on a fragile supply chain concentrated in only a few places.
With Taiwan manufacturing most of the world’s advanced chips, the U.S.-China technology rivalry has escalated, pushing countries to prioritise security, self-reliance, and strategic investment in chip ecosystems.
As Moore’s Law slows, breakthroughs are shifting toward advanced packaging, heterogeneous integration, and specialised chip design, making talent, innovation, and geopolitical stability more vital than ever. Discover the full story in Rushil’s article.
ADVANCED
Impact Report 2024-25
Annual Impact Report 2024-25
The Shadow Economy: Unmasking the Global Mechanics of Money Laundering
Money laundering is often seen as a distant, sophisticated crime, but it silently shapes global finance, fuels terrorism, and distorts economies. From shell companies and crypto wallets to false invoicing and deepfake identities, the methods have become smarter, faster, and harder to trace.
Despite strong laws and global frameworks, only a tiny fraction of illicit flows are ever detected. Regulatory gaps, weak data systems, and cross-border loopholes keep the shadow economy alive.
Money laundering isn’t just a financial crime; it’s a threat to governance, stability, and everyday economic fairness. Explore the full analysis in Madhav’s article.
Why are “Chips” the New Oil?
Semiconductors have quietly become the strategic backbone of the 21st century, powering everything from artificial intelligence and electric vehicles to defence, communication, and critical infrastructure. Their significance became undeniable when the global chip shortage revealed how dependent the world is on a fragile supply chain concentrated in only a few places.
With Taiwan manufacturing most of the world’s advanced chips, the U.S.-China technology rivalry has escalated, pushing countries to prioritise security, self-reliance, and strategic investment in chip ecosystems.
As Moore’s Law slows, breakthroughs are shifting toward advanced packaging, heterogeneous integration, and specialised chip design, making talent, innovation, and geopolitical stability more vital than ever. Discover the full story in Rushil’s article.
INTERMEDIATE
Impact Report 2024-25
Annual Impact Report 2024-25
The Shadow Economy: Unmasking the Global Mechanics of Money Laundering
Money laundering is often seen as a distant, sophisticated crime, but it silently shapes global finance, fuels terrorism, and distorts economies. From shell companies and crypto wallets to false invoicing and deepfake identities, the methods have become smarter, faster, and harder to trace.
Despite strong laws and global frameworks, only a tiny fraction of illicit flows are ever detected. Regulatory gaps, weak data systems, and cross-border loopholes keep the shadow economy alive.
Money laundering isn’t just a financial crime; it’s a threat to governance, stability, and everyday economic fairness. Explore the full analysis in Madhav’s article.
Why are “Chips” the New Oil?
Semiconductors have quietly become the strategic backbone of the 21st century, powering everything from artificial intelligence and electric vehicles to defence, communication, and critical infrastructure. Their significance became undeniable when the global chip shortage revealed how dependent the world is on a fragile supply chain concentrated in only a few places.
With Taiwan manufacturing most of the world’s advanced chips, the U.S.-China technology rivalry has escalated, pushing countries to prioritise security, self-reliance, and strategic investment in chip ecosystems.
As Moore’s Law slows, breakthroughs are shifting toward advanced packaging, heterogeneous integration, and specialised chip design, making talent, innovation, and geopolitical stability more vital than ever. Discover the full story in Rushil’s article.
NOVICE
Impact Report 2024-25
Annual Impact Report 2024-25
The Shadow Economy: Unmasking the Global Mechanics of Money Laundering
Money laundering is often seen as a distant, sophisticated crime, but it silently shapes global finance, fuels terrorism, and distorts economies. From shell companies and crypto wallets to false invoicing and deepfake identities, the methods have become smarter, faster, and harder to trace.
Despite strong laws and global frameworks, only a tiny fraction of illicit flows are ever detected. Regulatory gaps, weak data systems, and cross-border loopholes keep the shadow economy alive.
Money laundering isn’t just a financial crime; it’s a threat to governance, stability, and everyday economic fairness. Explore the full analysis in Madhav’s article.
Why are “Chips” the New Oil?
Semiconductors have quietly become the strategic backbone of the 21st century, powering everything from artificial intelligence and electric vehicles to defence, communication, and critical infrastructure. Their significance became undeniable when the global chip shortage revealed how dependent the world is on a fragile supply chain concentrated in only a few places.
With Taiwan manufacturing most of the world’s advanced chips, the U.S.-China technology rivalry has escalated, pushing countries to prioritise security, self-reliance, and strategic investment in chip ecosystems.
As Moore’s Law slows, breakthroughs are shifting toward advanced packaging, heterogeneous integration, and specialised chip design, making talent, innovation, and geopolitical stability more vital than ever. Discover the full story in Rushil’s article.

