The Hidden Costs of Porter Licenses: Exploitation and Economic Distortion at India’s Busiest Railway Stations India’s railway stations, vital arteries of the nation’s transport system, are marred by a shadowy nexus that exploits porters and passengers alike. At the 10 busiest stations—New Delhi, Howrah, Mumbai CSMT, Chennai Central, Kolkata, Secunderabad, Bengaluru City, Hazrat Nizamuddin, Anand Vihar, and Ahmedabad—tightly controlled porter licenses, traded at exorbitant rates (₹10–15 lakhs in New Delhi), create a black market fueled by scarcity. Porters, often from marginalized communities, borrow from informal lenders at usurious interest rates (36–120% annually), forcing them to charge passengers high fees (₹50–200 per load). A nexus of railway officials, police, and lenders profits, while porters bear debt burdens and passengers face inflated costs, misdirecting their frustration at porters. Despite India’s labor surplus, this gatekeeping system ensures high charges, economic in...