TY - JOUR
T1 - Protection Against Letters Of Credit Fraud
AU - Hussain, Sarfraz
AU - Ahmed, Alim Al Ayub
AU - Kurniullah, Ardhariksa Zukhruf
AU - Ramirez-Asis, Edwin
AU - Al-Awawdeh, Nabil
AU - Al-Shamayleh, Nasser Jamil Mohammed
AU - Julca-Guerrero, Felix
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021,Journal of Legal, Ethical and Regulatory Issues.All Rights Reserved
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Letters of Credit (Ls/C), the most common form of financing international commerce, have been a major source of worry for the whole international business world in recent years due to Ls/C fraud. Every year, the parties to the LS/C transaction lose billions of dollars due to fraud. A variety of reasons have led to the proliferation of such frauds. Many of them include the exclusive use of paper in international commerce, geographical distance in international trade, containerization, the usage of discounted Ls/C, and the absence of prosecution. Many academics and legal experts have been hesitant to interfere in Letter of Credit (Ls/C) transactions and have criticized local government regulations all around the globe. Allowing the courts to intervene with bankers' guarantees, according to government officials, may risk its integrity and make it more costly and ineffective than required. Due to a lack of regulation, recent research indicates that relevant organizations take certain measures to prevent Ls/C fraud, such as verifying the seller's reputation via well-known transportation services. Shipping, pre-shipment inspections, performance bonds, and electronic trade papers are all part of the process.
AB - Letters of Credit (Ls/C), the most common form of financing international commerce, have been a major source of worry for the whole international business world in recent years due to Ls/C fraud. Every year, the parties to the LS/C transaction lose billions of dollars due to fraud. A variety of reasons have led to the proliferation of such frauds. Many of them include the exclusive use of paper in international commerce, geographical distance in international trade, containerization, the usage of discounted Ls/C, and the absence of prosecution. Many academics and legal experts have been hesitant to interfere in Letter of Credit (Ls/C) transactions and have criticized local government regulations all around the globe. Allowing the courts to intervene with bankers' guarantees, according to government officials, may risk its integrity and make it more costly and ineffective than required. Due to a lack of regulation, recent research indicates that relevant organizations take certain measures to prevent Ls/C fraud, such as verifying the seller's reputation via well-known transportation services. Shipping, pre-shipment inspections, performance bonds, and electronic trade papers are all part of the process.
KW - Documentary Credit
KW - Documentary Credit Fraud
KW - International Chamber Of Commerce
KW - International Trade
KW - Sales Agreement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85116110237&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85116110237
SN - 1544-0036
VL - 24
SP - 1
EP - 11
JO - Journal of Legal, Ethical and Regulatory Issues
JF - Journal of Legal, Ethical and Regulatory Issues
IS - Special Issue 1
ER -