Friday 12 December 2008

HR Will See Increase In Corporate Fraud

Aliah D Wright, online editor for SHRM reports on a very disturbing trend which is emerging as the labour and financial markets become tighter. Our experience here at Powerchex, further re-enforces the results of this study, as we have seen a significant increase in application fraud.
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Corporate fraud is on the rise, and, despite new laws to curb such abuse, this trend will significantly impact human resource professionals, says an expert in business intelligence. According to recently released Global Fraud Report, the average company loss to fraud has increased by 22 percent. The losses are largely driven by the credit crunch and troubled economic climate attributable to the subprime mortgage nightmare.
On average, businesses have lost $8.2 million to fraud in the past three years, compared with the 2007 figure, which stood at $7.6 million. The figures come from a study commissioned from the Economist Intelligence Unit based on a survey of 890 senior executives worldwide.What Types of Fraud?
The fastest-growing types of fraud were information theft (27 percent, up from 22 percent) and regulatory and compliance breaches (25 percent, up from 19 percent).
A closer look revealed that more than four out of five companies surveyed (85 percent) have suffered from corporate fraud in the past three years, up from 80 percent in the 2007 survey. For large companies, the proportion suffering from fraud rose to 90 percent, according to the study.

When it comes to breaches in compliance, HR is in the middle of the fray, having to manage compliance because of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, which requires U.S. public companies and their independent auditors to show the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) that their financial numbers are accurate and that they have processes in place to ensure that accuracy.
And the cost of complying isn't cheap.
According to the Financial Executives International's seventh Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) compliance survey, the average 2007 SOX compliance cost was $1.7 million.
"Federal authorities--the SEC, Department of Justice and the U.S. attorney's office will apply regulations in new and unique ways in order to stem corporate improper activities and make sure there is more corporate accountability," Coppotelli said.
This might make HR's job even more challenging--especially given today's climate in which the federal government is willing to step in and aid those who might have committed corporate malfeasance in the subprime mortgage debacle.
"I think the whole subprime issue has yet to be fully addressed in terms of malfeasance," Coppotelli said.
$7.6M AMOUNT LOST BY BUSINESSES IN 2007 ATTRIBUTABLE TO CORPORATE FRAUD.
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By Aliah D. Wright
Aliah D. Wright, an online editor/manager for SHRM.

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