Hear some of the best-reported stories from the Financial Times’s investigative journalists. The dialogue in these podcasts is based on interviews, court records and other documents. We pace each story over a series of episodes.
The UK's private finance initiative was designed as an alternative way to fund the building of hospitals, schools and other infrastructure. But was it...
There are two ways of looking at Britain’s rail privatisation story. If you focus on usage, it looks like a success. But look at the cost and level of...
Years of austerity and rising bills in the UK have eroded the consensus that private companies could run utilities more cheaply and efficiently than t...
Afghanistan has made great strides in areas of womens' education and employment, in spite of the insecurity and violence that dominate the headlines. ...
China has a controversial history in Cambodia, where it was the main foreign supporter of the genocidal Khmer Rouge in the 1970s. These days China is ...
Was Omar Mateen persuaded by Islamist propaganda to carry out his attack on the Orlando nightclub? How can western security agencies fight back agains...
McKinsey, one of the world’s most influential consulting firms, has built up a secretive $5bn internal investment arm that manages the fortunes of its...
Through his investigation into the London operations of Swiss bank BSI, Tom Burgis has looked into the nuts and bolts of how some banks help clients h...
South Dakota's role as a prairie tax haven has gained unwanted attention since the release of the Panama Papers, an investigation by the International...
The leaked “Panama Papers” show how a Panamanian law firm, Mossack Fonseca, secretly shepherded a web of offshore accounts that resulted in billions o...