US Citizens More Likely To Be Victimized With Digital Fraud
April 6, 2022
According to a
new report, geographies and generations
differ greatly in the frequency and impact of financial fraud, as well
as their attitudes toward fraud detection and the institutions
responsible for protecting them from bad actors.
The 2022 IBM Global Financial Fraud Impact Report also found that as
global consumers have moved nearly exclusively to credit card and
digital payments, US citizens have been victimized more regularly than
all other countries surveyed in the report, costing American consumers
an average of $265 per year in fraudulent financial charges made by
unauthorized third parties.
"Financial fraud and cyber threats are a growing menace to global
financial institutions and their clients, increasing the need for
companies to accelerate preventative measures to stay ahead of
sophisticated criminal activity," said Shanker Ramamurthy, Managing
Partner, Global Banking & Financial Markets, IBM. "As the global
economy's evolution toward a cashless society continues at breakneck
speed, banks and other financial institutions must continue to invest in
modernizing their infrastructure and bolstering critical talent to meet
the challenges they face from bad actors."
Global Financial Impact
According to the report, when it comes to fraud on a global scale,
American citizens are the most frequent victims of debit card fraud of
all the countries surveyed. Americans also registered a large percentage
of instances when it comes to being victims of credit card fraud,
banking fraud, or digital payment fraud, when respondents were asked
about their experiences using digital payment apps including PayPal,
Venmo and Square. American respondents also spent the most time trying
to recover money lost due to fraudulent charges.
However, US credit and debit card users reported the second lowest
amount of money lost on fraudulent charges out of the countries
surveyed. Only Japan reported a lower amount of losses over the last 12
months, while Germany, by far, was the most victimized country, with
respondents losing more than three times the total financial amount of
the second most victimized country (Singapore).
Across all countries, respondents believe banks are the financial
institution most responsible for preventing fraud, when asked about
their experiences using payment networks including Visa and Mastercard.
In most countries, consumers see banks as the most responsible financial
institution for preventing fraud, with a higher percentage in Brazil,
while in Japan, payment networks were the financial institutions most
likely to blame. In China, respondents registered the highest percentage
of consumers who think government regulators are most responsible for
preventing fraud.
In the US, nearly one-quarter of all respondents (22%) are not confident
in their bank or credit card's ability to handle fraudulent charges or
suspicious activity, not nearly as much as Japan, where almost one half
of respondents claim to not have faith in their financial institutions.
One quarter of Americans (25%) report spending less than an hour a year
checking their accounts for fraudulent activity – while more than two
out of five US consumers (44%) spend less than ten hours per year
checking their banking accounts.
With the US experiencing the highest number of financial fraud
instances, it would make sense that the US has the highest percentage of
respondents who had to contact their bank or credit card company to
either cancel a card, dispute a charge, or reported losing money as the
result of fraudulent charges.
Generational Differences Found in Study
The report also found a wide range of generational differences, as
Millennials (born between 1981 and 1996) are consistently the biggest
victims of all forms of fraud, ranging from credit and debit card fraud
to digital wallet, digital payment, banking and tax fraud.
GenXers (born between 1965 and 1980) reported the second highest number
of fraudulent charges made by their credit cards or digital payment
apps, while GenZers (born between 1997 and 2012) report the third
highest instances of losing money as the result of a fraudulent charges.
Millennials also spend the most time trying to recover money lost due to
fraudulent charges, disputing fraudulent charges, and checking accounts
for fraudulent or unusual activity out of any of the generational
groups. GenZers spend the second most amount of time addressing
fraudulent activity, followed by GenXers and Baby Boomers.
GenZers experienced fraud most frequently through digital payment apps
when asked about their experiences using digital payment apps including
PayPal, Venmo and Square, while all other generations experienced
financial security issues most frequently by credit card fraud. GenZers
were also the generation least impacted by credit card fraud.
While Millennials and GenZers were concerned financial fraud is most
likely to occur through their digital payment apps, for GenXers and Baby
Boomers, credit cards are the biggest concern when it comes to potential
fraud targets.
Baby Boomers (born between 1946 and 1964) reported the lowest instances
of fraudulent charges in nearly all categories, also spending the least
amount of time trying to recover money due to fraudulent charges or
dispute fraudulent charges.
However, when broken down further by generation, Millennials were more
likely to buy from businesses with fraud protection, while Baby Boomers
were the least likely to do so.
Other Findings
Credit card fraud is the most common type of fraud experienced across
all countries. Nearly a third (31%) in Brazil have experienced credit
card fraud.
Brazilian and Singaporean consumers are most concerned with financial
security issues (85% of Brazilian and 79% of Singaporean respondents
cite concerns with credit card fraud), but a substantial portion across
all countries are concerned about credit card fraud, debit card fraud,
digital payment fraud, digital wallet fraud, and banking fraud.
On
average, German adults lost more due to fraudulent charges than adults
in any other country – with an average of 3,520 euros ($3,917 in US
currency) lost in the past twelve months due to fraudulent charges.
Singapore had the second highest amount of fraudulent charges, with an
average of S$1,648.52 Singapore dollars ($1,217 in US currency) per
adult.
Japanese respondents are less confident in their bank/credit card
company's ability to handle fraud (only 59% have confidence in their
financial institution's ability to handle fraud prevention), but a
majority across all countries feel confident in their bank/credit card
company's ability to handle fraud.
A majority of adults in all countries are "more likely" to purchase a
product from a business that has fraud prevention technology in place,
led by Brazil (91%) and China (90%). |