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Fraud Library

Protecting Against Credit Card Theft

External Threats Facing your Organization

Is your organization required to be compliant with the Red Flags Rule?

Smartphone Vulnerabilities, Safeguarding Your Phone

Identity Theft: How to Prevent it, How to Respond

Protect Against Procurement Fraud

Is Anything Really What it Seems?

Protecting Your Intellectual Property from Fraud and Abuse

Internal Revenue Service Cracking Down on Tax Fraud

Protecting Your Organization from Becoming a Victim of the Underground Economy

How Healthcare Fraud Affects Us All

Developing and Implementing Distributor Audits to Curb Product Diversion

Increasing The Perception That Fraud Will Be Detected

New Red Flags Rule to Prevent Identity Theft

Fraud Du Jour

Protect Yourself: Don't Be a Victim of a Ponzi Scheme

Economic Hard Times: The Impact on Fraud

Theft By Collusion: Five Times More Loss

Employee Fraud: How Much Should You Spend to Prevent it?

Why Internal Controls and Reviews Are Needed

Payroll Fraud: How It's Done, How to Prevent It

Using CPAs in Fraud & Embezzlement Cases

Anatomy of an Interview, Part II: why a trained interviewer is critical

Anatomy of An Interview, Part I: how to best solicit the truth

Fraud: Safeguards Can Help Mitigate Risks

Is Your Organization Susceptible to Fraud?

Your Best Options for Getting Your Money Back

Finding Assets Postmortem: Where Did All the Money Go?

When There's a Team Effort to Defraud

How to Reduce the Threat of Internal Credit Card Fraud

Who Are You Hiring?

Detecting Fraud: When Good Employees Go Bad

Nonprofits Face Special Challenges in Protecting Against Fraud

The Most Common Types of Fraudulent Disbursements

Investigating an Allegation of Fraud

Developing and Implementing Franchise Audits

The Importance of Background Checks

Expense Reimbursement Fraud: Ten Ways to Protect Your Organization

Browse the entire Fraud Library.

Employee Fraud: How Much Should You Spend to Prevent it?

by Jim Marasco , CIA, CFE, CPA
Director, Corporate Services
StoneBridge Business Partners

Reprinted with permission from Fraud Matters Newsletter of CPA America.

Forensic accountants stress that the best way to prevent fraud is to establish an efficient control system

How much should you spend on such a system? What mechanisms have worked best for other companies?

And, perhaps, most importantly – What is the price of doing nothing?

The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners and other groups provide the guidance below.

Control System

An efficient control system should include:

  • A strong control environment influenced by management’s philosophy of ethical behavior and strong corporate governance policies
  • A solid accounting system that ensures proper recording, classification and reporting of all transactions
  • Tight procedural controls that provide for safeguarding of assets, proper authorizations, audit mechanisms and proper documentation

Prevention Measures

The most common prevention measures used by organizations according to ACFE reports were external audits (75%); internal audits (59%); fraud training and hotlines (49%); and surprise audits (29%). Those organizations using internal audits, surprise audits, fraud training and hotlines experienced a significantly lower median loss and detection time than those organizations that did not.

Fraud Detection

While prevention measures are important, it’s helpful to know how most frauds are discovered. The ACFE said 34 percent of all frauds in their study were detected by tips. These tips came from vendors, customers, employees and anonymous sources. The remaining frauds were detected by:

  • Accident – 25% of the time
  • Internal audit – 20%
  • Internal controls – 19%
  • External audit – 12%
  • Notification by police – 4%

This clearly demonstrates the importance of having a strong internal control environment, a mechanism of reporting tips and abuses to someone who will react accordingly and external and internal audit services performed.

Industries Most Likely to Experience Fraud

The industries experiencing the most incidents of occupational fraud, in order of number of occurrences, are:

  • Banking/Financial Services
  • Government and Public Administration
  • Manufacturing
  • Health Care
  • Insurance
  • Retail

Cost of Prevention Measures

Because of fraud’s disastrous consequences, failure to implement safeguards could jeopardize your business. The ACFE estimates that fraud costs typical U.S. companies 6 percent of their annual revenues.

Determining how much your company should spend to safeguard itself is difficult to estimate. The ACFE doesn’t recommend how much an organization should spend on compliance. But, various studies analyzing Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) corporate governance reforms have been conducted.

SOX reforms have cost public companies millions of dollars. One study, conducted by Foley & Lardner, LLP, found that the average cost of compliance for private firms was $50,000, whereas public companies reported that costs were close to $3 million.

An industry rule of thumb says that a company should plan to spend about $1 million on SOX compliance for every $1 billion in annual revenue. However, a study by A.R.C. Morgan found that companies in the $1 billion revenue range are already spending more than $2 million, without factoring internal resource spending and growing auditor fees. According to Morgan, this figure is likely to grow to $3 million in the near future.

Fraud prevention costs could vary significantly and are based on a number of factors. For example, you may be forced to adopt corporate governance reforms such as SOX (public companies); conform to industry-specific regulatory compliance (banking, financial or insurance); or operate in an industry more prone to occupational fraud. In some cases, it becomes a judgment decision.

What would you spend to safeguard from losing 6 percent of your annual revenues?

We can all agree that fraud prevention should not be ignored. Our firm can perform the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners fraud prevention checkup on your organization to determine your vulnerabilities.

The incidence of fraud is now so common that its occurrence is no longer remarkable, only its scale, the ACFE says.

By failing to protect your organization, you can expect to become a victim of fraud at some point in the future and become a statistic in their next study.

James I. Marasco, CPA/CFF, CFE, CIA
Jim is a partner at EFP Rotenberg. He brings more than 18 years of public accounting and auditing experience. He is a full-time management consultant and travels extensively throughout the country while leading StoneBridge Business Partners (an EFP Rotenberg affiliate company). Read more about Jim . Article republished with the permission of CPAmerica.

 

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