Overall, the travel and leisure industry suffers comparatively few problems from corporate fraud.
- The loss per firm during the past three years was $1.1m, or one-sixth of the average, although this is partly due to the lower turnover per firm in this sector, which equates to 80% of the average.
- Overall, fraud has grown slightly less prevalent for this sector during the same period, with just 22% reporting an increase. Accordingly, companies show only moderate concern about the issue.
- Businesses are less likely to consider themselves highly vulnerable to all types of fraud, with only 13% characterising themselves as such for the most common worries: information theft and internal financial fraud.
- The current use of anti-fraud strategies is very close to the average across the board, leaving 20% making no use of financial controls against these threats, and 30% eschewing IT countermeasures or security systems for physical assets.
- The proportion planning investment in such strategies is also very close to the mean.
Worrying data, however, suggest that more attention is needed.
- Although the costs are still small, the prevalence of certain types of risk are alarmingly high in the travel industry: 42% have suffered from theft of physical assets (the overall average is 34%); 30% from management conflict of interest (compared with 21%); 27% from internal financial fraud or theft (compared with 19%); and 24% from corruption and bribery (compared with 19%). All these tend to balloon if left unchecked, so their wide prevalence, even at low volumes, is a concern.
Although the problem of corporate fraud is not currently as serious as that faced by other sectors, the travel industry must take greater care to ensure that it does not become more prevalent.