Companies
'cook the books to meet tough targets' - survey
Hard-pressed
company bosses across much of the world are under so much pressure to
deliver on growth that many have resorted to cooking the books, Ernst
& Young says in its latest Fraud Survey published on Tuesday
7
May, 2013
One
in five of almost 3,500 staff quizzed in 36 countries in Europe, the
Middle East, Africa and India said they had seen financial
manipulation in their companies in the last 12 months, the accounting
and consultancy firm said.
In
addition 42 percent of board directors and top managers surveyed said
they were aware of "some type of irregular financial reporting".
And
despite scandals and regulatory failures in the wake of the credit
crunch, almost a quarter of top financial services staff surveyed
said they were aware of manipulation and almost 10 percent of all
staff said their companies had understated costs, overstated revenues
or used unprincipled sales tactics.
Meanwhile,
almost half of the sales staff surveyed across all sectors did not
consider anti-corruption policies to be relevant and more than a
quarter thought it acceptable to offer personal gifts or services to
win or retain business.
In
India, over a third felt justified in offering cash - triple the
number in western Europe.
"Our
survey shows that to find growth and improved performance in this
environment, an alarming number appear to be comfortable with or
aware of unethical conduct," said David Stulb, head of E&Y's
fraud investigation and dispute services practice.
In
Spain, ranked alongside Russia and just below Nigeria and Slovenia,
61 percent of staff believed companies often exaggerated results,
compared with only 7 percent in Finland.
And
E&Y said the vast majority of managers from Norway to Nigeria and
Russia to Greece were feeling the pressure to deliver a good
financial performance over the next 12 months, despite little
optimism that business conditions would improve.
They
were now forced to balance the risks of expanding into rapid-growth
markets, where winning contracts can go hand-in-hand with corruption,
cutting costs further and piling pressure on staff or suppliers - or
distorting results, the firm said.
E&Y
warned multinationals based in mature markets they could be more
vulnerable to the risks of unethical behaviour. One quarter of those
asked thought watchdogs in rapid-growth markets focussed more on the
behaviour of foreign businesses.
The
consultancy called on managers to ask more robust questions, focus on
key risks, such as poor due diligence accounting checks of
intermediaries and associates, and punish unethical behaviour.
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