| Literature DB >> 34276474 |
Yoshihiko Kadoya1, Mostafa Saidur Rahim Khan1, Jin Narumoto2, Satoshi Watanabe3.
Abstract
Japan has seen an increase in the incidents of financial frauds over the last couple of decades. Although authorities are aware of the problem, an effective solution eludes them as fraudsters use innovative swindling methods and continually change the target group. Using a nationwide survey conducted by Hiroshima University, Japan, in 2020, this study investigated the socioeconomic and psychological profiles of victims of trending and special financial fraud such as fictitious billing fraud, loan guarantee fraud, and refund fraud. It was found that financial fraud victims' profiles are dissimilar at the aggregate and specific levels. At the specific level, victim profiles were diverse, that is, in fictitious billing fraud, loan guarantee fraud, and refund fraud cases. Males, married, and financially less satisfied people were more often victims of fictitious billing fraud; less anxious people were more likely victims of loan guarantee fraud; and older, asset-holding, and less-income-generating respondents were found to be victims of refund fraud. Our results also show some commonalities in the victims' profiles. For example, financially less-literate people were found to be more likely victims of fictitious billing fraud and loan guarantee fraud. Finally, respondents who lived with their family, those who did not have careful buying habits, and those who suffer from bouts of loneliness were found to be common victims of all types of special financial fraud. The results of our study suggest that a one-size-fits-all policy cannot effectively combat financial fraud.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic; Japan; aged society; financial fraud; victim
Year: 2021 PMID: 34276474 PMCID: PMC8283193 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.649565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Definition and measurement of variables.
| Special financial frauds | Whether participants have experienced special financial frauds such as fictitious billing fraud, loan guarantee fraud, or refund fraud in the last 3 years of conducting the survey (also included those who experienced financial fraud but were able to avoid damage). Respondents' experience about special financial frauds were measured from the following question: “Which type of bank transfer swindle did you experience?” The options included “Fictitious billing fraud,” “Loan guarantee fraud,” “Refund fraud,” “I don't know or don't want to answer.” The dependent variable is binary in nature where 1 = victim of special financial frauds such as fictitious billing fraud, loan guarantee fraud, and refund fraud, 0 = otherwise |
| Gender | Gender of respondents. 1 = male, 0 = female |
| Age | Age of respondents in years |
| Marital status | Marital status of respondents where 1 = married, 0 = otherwise |
| Living with family | 1 = respondents living with family, 0 = otherwise |
| Education | Years of education completed by respondents |
| Financial literacy | Financial literacy measures respondents' ability to understand basic financial calculations, inflation, and risks of financial securities. Following questions were asked to respondents: |
| Employment status | Employment status where 1 = currently employed, 0 = otherwise |
| Household income | Annual household income in yen |
| Household assets | Household balance of financial assets in yen |
| Myopic view | Respondents' perceptions about the future, which was measured by the following statement: “Since the future is uncertain, it is a waste of time thinking about it” (5 being completely agree and 1 being completely disagree). |
| Financial satisfaction | Respondents' current level of financial satisfaction, which was measured by the following statement: “I am happy with my financial status” (5 being completely agree and 1 being completely disagree). |
| Anxiety | Respondents' anxiety about life in old age, which was measured by the following statement: “I have anxieties about my life after I turn 65” (5 being the highest and 1 being the lowest). |
| Careful spending habit | Respondents' carefulness in spending, which is measured by the following statement: “I think carefully before buying anything” (5 being the highest and 1 being the lowest). |
| Trust | Respondents' trust in other people, which was measured by the following statement: “In general, most people are trustworthy” (5 being completely agree and 1 being completely disagree). |
| Loneliness | The extent to which respondents feel loneliness. Respondents' loneliness was measured by the following question: “How often do you feel lonely” (1 being never and 5 being often or always). |
Descriptive statistics.
| Special financial frauds | 11,218 | 0.0497 | 0.2172 | 0 | 1 |
| Fictitious billing fraud | 11,218 | 0.0344 | 0.1823 | 0 | 1 |
| Loan guarantee fraud | 11,218 | 0.0116 | 0.1070 | 0 | 1 |
| Refund fraud | 11,218 | 0.0087 | 0.0926 | 0 | 1 |
| Gender | 11,218 | 0.6119 | 0.4873 | 0 | 1 |
| Age | 11,218 | 47.5869 | 14.3632 | 20 | 92 |
| Marital status | 11,218 | 0.8238 | 0.3810 | 0 | 1 |
| Living with family | 11,218 | 0.8066 | 0.3950 | 0 | 1 |
| Education | 11,218 | 14.9001 | 2.0776 | 9 | 21 |
| Financial literacy | 11,218 | 0.6557 | 0.3565 | 0 | 1 |
| Employment status | 11,218 | 0.6658 | 0.4717 | 0 | 1 |
| Household income (in thousand yen) | 11,218 | 5,489.0000 | 1,092.5000 | 1,000 | 20,000 |
| Household assets (in thousand yen) | 11,218 | 7,215.2500 | 4,626.2500 | 2,500 | 100,000 |
| Myopic view | 11,218 | 2.5828 | 1.0067 | 1 | 5 |
| Financial satisfaction | 11,218 | 2.6994 | 1.0965 | 1 | 5 |
| Anxiety | 11,218 | 3.7199 | 1.1745 | 1 | 5 |
| Careful spending habit | 11,218 | 4.0414 | 0.9854 | 1 | 5 |
| Trust | 11,218 | 2.8141 | 0.9448 | 1 | 5 |
| Loneliness | 11,218 | 2.8682 | 1.1887 | 1 | 5 |
Obs., observation; Std. dev., standard deviation; Min., minimum; Max., maximum.
Detailed description of special financial frauds based on important variables.
| Gender | Female | 0.0312 (0.1740) | 0.0096 (0.0978) | 0.0069 (0.0827) |
| Male | 0.0364 (0.1874) | 0.0128 (0.1125) | 0.0098 (0.0983) | |
| Age | <40 | 0.0353 (0.1846) | 0.0133 (0.1147) | 0.0076 (0.0868) |
| 40–65 | 0.0310 (0.1733) | 0.0101 (0.0998) | 0.0060 (0.0774) | |
| >65 | 0.0463 (0.2101) | 0.0133 (0.1147) | 0.0224 (0.1481) | |
| Marital status | Married | 0.0330 (0.1787) | 0.0119 (0.1085) | 0.0089 (0.0938) |
| Not married | 0.0410 (0.1983) | 0.0101 (0.1001) | 0.0076 (0.0868) | |
| Education | <12 | 0.0392 (0.1948) | 0.0000 (0.0000) | 0.0065 (0.0808) |
| 12–16 | 0.0351 (0.1841) | 0.0112 (0.1053) | 0.0090 (0.0946) | |
| >16 | 0.0265 (0.1606) | 0.0173 (0.1304) | 0.0051 (0.0712) | |
| Employment status | Employed | 0.0333 (0.1795) | 0.0125 (0.1109) | 0.0072 (0.0847) |
| Not employed | 0.0365 (0.1877) | 0.0099 (0.0989) | 0.0115 (0.1065) | |
| Household income | Below average | 0.0369 (0.1884) | 0.0110 (0.1045) | 0.0090 (0.0945) |
| Above average | 0.0317 (0.1752) | 0.0122 (0.1098) | 0.0083 (0.0905) | |
| Household assets | Below average | 0.0355 (0.1850) | 0.0106 (0.1025) | 0.0063 (0.0791) |
| Above average | 0.0332 (0.1791) | 0.0127 (0.1121) | 0.0114 (0.1061) | |
| Careful spending habit | Mostly careful | 0.0331 (0.1790) | 0.0069 (0.0829) | 0.0084 (0.0910) |
| Mostly careless | 0.0352 (0.1842) | 0.0144 (0.1191) | 0.0088 (0.0935) | |
| Loneliness | Mostly lonely | 0.0409 (0.1982) | 0.0148 (0.1207) | 0.0095 (0.0970) |
| Hardly lonely | 0.0257 (0.1581) | 0.0073 (0.0851) | 0.0075 (0.0863) | |
Regression results.
| Gender | 0.2689 (2.39) | 0.2406 (1.76) | 0.1353 (0.52) | 0.2964 (0.92) |
| Age | 0.0065 (1.67) | 0.0049 (1.03) | 0.0035 (0.39) | 0.0237 (2.13) |
| Marital status | −0.2560 (−2.01) | −0.3389 (−2.23) | −0.1616 (−0.52) | −0.1338 (−0.35) |
| Living with family | 0.6852 (4.77) | 0.6785 (3.91) | 0.8376 (2.36) | 1.035 (2.15) |
| Education | −0.0053 (−0.23) | −0.0162 (−0.58) | 0.0322 (0.61) | −0.0354 (−0.56) |
| Financial literacy | −0.4678 (−3.47) | −0.4472 (−2.71) | −0.6135 (−1.99) | 0.0868 (0.22) |
| Employment status | −0.0200 (−0.18) | −0.0142 (−0.10) | 0.3213 (1.17) | −0.2441 (−0.80) |
| Household income | −0.0411 (−1.54) | −0.0406 (−1.20) | −0.0259 (−0.45) | −0.1369 (−1.81) |
| Household assets | 0.0322 (1.65) | 0.0073 (0.29) | 0.0480 (1.09) | 0.0947 (1.82) |
| Myopic view | −0.0765 (−1.66) | −0.0312 (−0.56) | −0.0928 (−0.87) | −0.1881 (−1.42) |
| Financial satisfaction | −0.0244 (−0.51) | −0.0988 (−1.67) | 0.1556 (1.40) | 0.0863 (0.62) |
| Anxiety | −0.0639 (−1.53) | −0.0411 (−0.79) | −0.2066 (−2.26) | −0.0477 (−0.41) |
| Careful spending habit | −0.2342 (−5.42) | −0.0932 (−1.68) | −0.5296 (−5.78) | −0.3787 (−3.27) |
| Trust | −0.0157 (−0.32) | −0.0144 (−0.24) | 0.0249 (0.22) | 0.1789 (1.27) |
| Loneliness | 0.2025 (5.17) | 0.1564 (3.26) | 0.2839 (3.11) | 0.1871 (1.69) |
| Cons | −2.4883 (−4.93) | −2.9752 (−4.75) | −4.3959 (−3.84) | −5.6610 (−3.87) |
| Obs. | 11,218 | 11,189 | 11,187 | 11,191 |
| LR Chi2 | 122.90 | 55.78 | 82.04 | 55.37 |
| Pseudo | 0.0277 | 0.0176 | 0.0724 | 0.0651 |
| Log likelihood | −2,153.9965 | −1,553.2012 | −525.5523 | −397.2996 |
The z values in parentheses.
***, **, and * represent significance at the 1, 5, and 10% levels, respectively.
Regression results using interaction variables.
| Gender | −0.2609 (−0.75) | 0.2618 (0.61) | −1.7061 (−1.99) | −1.9296 (−1.96) |
| Age | 0.0260 (2.85) | 0.0147 (1.31) | 0.0160 (0.74) | 0.0572 (2.30) |
| Marital status | −0.2851 (−1.50) | 0.0044 (0.02) | −0.9651 (−2.40) | −1.0522 (−2.09) |
| Living with family | 0.6820 (4.75) | 0.7014 (4.02) | 0.7873 (2.23) | 0.9534 (2.01) |
| Education | −0.0032 (−0.14) | −0.0129 (−0.46) | 0.0296 (0.56) | −0.0338 (−0.53) |
| Financial literacy | −0.4650 (−3.45) | −0.4486 (−2.72) | −0.6075 (−1.96) | 0.0965 (0.24) |
| Employment status | −0.0053 (−0.05) | 0.0597 (0.44) | 0.2487 (0.88) | −0.3300 (−1.04) |
| Household income | −0.0406 (−1.52) | −0.0425 (−1.25) | −0.0225 (−0.39) | −0.1325 (−1.74) |
| Household assets | 0.0309 (1.58) | 0.0070 (0.28) | 0.0480 (1.08) | 0.0942 (1.80) |
| Myopic view | −0.0753 (−1.63) | −0.0320 (−0.57) | −0.0951 (−0.89) | −0.1856 (−1.41) |
| Financial satisfaction | −0.0244 (−0.51) | −0.0986 (−1.66) | 0.1637 (1.46) | 0.0892 (0.65) |
| Anxiety | −0.0603 (−1.44) | −0.0429 (−0.82) | −0.1935 (−2.10) | −0.0276 (−0.24) |
| Careful spending habit | −0.2354 (−5.44) | −0.0921 (−1.66) | −0.5390 (−5.84) | −0.3889 (−3.33) |
| Trust | −0.0178 (−0.36) | −0.0160 (−0.27) | 0.0222 (0.19) | 0.1764 (1.26) |
| Loneliness | 0.4162 (3.11) | 0.2159 (1.32) | 0.3958 (1.27) | 0.6599 (1.60) |
| Gender*married | 0.0590 (0.25) | −0.5392 (−1.83) | 1.5952 (2.58) | 1.7412 (2.39) |
| Gender*loneliness | 0.1555 (1.89) | 0.1240 (1.23) | 0.1822 (0.94) | 0.3045 (1.29) |
| Age*loneliness | −0.0065 (−2.38) | −0.0030 (−0.87) | −0.0048 (−0.75) | −0.0126 (−1.72) |
| Cons | −3.1561 (−4.63) | −3.5381 (−4.24) | −3.9571 (−2.52) | −6.2676 (−3.08) |
| Obs. | 11,218 | 11,189 | 11,187 | 11,191 |
| LR Chi2 | 130.04 | 61.64 | 90.07 | 64.64 |
| Pseudo | 0.0293 | 0.0195 | 0.0795 | 0.0760 |
| Log likelihood | −2,150.4254 | −1,550.2722 | −521.5368 | −392.6681 |
The z values in parentheses.
***, **, and * represent significance at the 1, 5, and 10% levels, respectively.