We provide a lower-bound estimate of the undetected share of corporate fraud. To identify the hidden part of the “iceberg,” we exploit Arthur Andersen’s demise, which triggered added scrutiny on Arthur Andersen’s former clients and thereby increased the detection likelihood of preexisting frauds. Our evidence suggests that in normal times only one-third of corporate frauds are detected. We estimate that on average 10% of large publicly traded firms are committing securities fraud every year, with a 95% confidence interval of 7%-14%. Combining fraud pervasiveness with existing estimates of the costs of detected and undetected fraud, we estimate that corporate fraud destroys 1.6% of equity value each year, equal to $830 billion in 2021.
How pervasive is corporate fraud?
Alexander Dyck,Adair Morse,Luigi Zingales
Published 2013 in Review of accounting studies
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- Publication year
2013
- Venue
Review of accounting studies
- Publication date
2013-02-22
- Fields of study
Law, Business, Economics
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Semantic Scholar
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