From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Job fraud refers to fraudulent or deceptive
activity or representation on the part of an employee or prospective
employee toward an employer. It is not to be confused with employment
fraud, where an employer scams job seekers or fails to pay
wages for work performed. There are several types of job frauds
that employees or potential employees commit against employers.
While some may be illegal under jurisdictional laws, others do not
violate law but may be held by the employer against the employee or
applicant.
Résumé
fraud
Résumé fraud or application fraud
refers to any act that involves providing fictitious, exaggerated,
or otherwise misleading information on a job application or résumé in hopes of
persuading a potential employer to hire an applicant for a job they
may be unqualified for, or that they are less qualified than other
applicants.[1]
Depending on the nature of the offense, the type of job, and the
jurisdiction where it occurs, such an act may or may not be a
violation of criminal
law. In any case, providing knowingly inaccurate information to
an employer or potential employer, if discovered by the employer,
is almost always grounds for immediate dismissal from the
job or else denial of that job.
Trends
A number of annual reports, including BDO Hayward's Fraudtrack
4[2] and
CIFAS,[3] the
UK's fraud prevention service, has shown a rising level of major
discrepancies and embellishments on curriculum vitae (CV) over
previous years.
Business fraud cost UK businesses 1.4 bn in 2005.[4]
Recent research released by Powerchex has confirmed this trend. Having
measured 3,876 applicants to the UK financial sector over the past
year, they found that 17% of potential candidates embellished their
CV, and found a trend between a graduates choice of university and
their liklihood to lie on their CV.[5][6]
Effects
Almost half (48%) of organizations with fewer than 100 staff
experienced problems with vetted employees.
39% of UK organizations have experienced a situation where their
vetting procedures have allowed an employee to be hired who was
later found to have lied or misrepresented themselves in their
application.[7]
Demographics
Younger, more junior people are more likely to have a
discrepancy on their CV. Someone in a junior administrative
position is 23% more likely to have a discrepancy on their CV than
in a managerial role. An applicant aged under 20 is 26% more likely
to have a discrepancy than a 51-60 year old.[8]
Women are marginally more likely to have a discrepancy on their
CV: 13% of applications submitted by women have a discrepancy
compared to only 10% of those for men.[9]
Graduates have marginally fewer discrepancies: 13% of their CVs
contain a discrepancy compared to 17% of non-graduates.
Types
- Fake credentials: Some applicants
provide false documents that are required or strongly recommended
to obtain a job. These may include a degree, license, certificate, or other
evidence of necessary training or experience that is expected of
applicants.
- Fictititious former
employer(s): The applicant provides a list of
previous employers that they never worked for, and that may have
never existed. They may include fake reference letters that vouch
for the applicant. Absence of contact information may seem
plausible if the applicant claims they are no longer in business,
living far away, or otherwise out of touch.
- Fake "live" employer(s): The
applicant arranges with a relative or friend to pose as a former
boss. The applicant provides a phone number or other contact
information, and when the prospective employer contacts this
person, they receive a glowing report about the applicant. Since
the widespread use of email, this form of communication may also
be used by the applicants themselves to pose as former
employers.
- Exaggerated claims: The applicant
lists a genuine former employer, but leaves out information with
the intent to mislead. The employer may have a prestigious
reputation, but the applicant's position may have been menial.
Examples of résumé
fraud
- The applicant gets past the "20 second resume cull" by making
bold statements such as "1st place Academic Standing: Session 1,
2005 and Session 2, 2004", and only later qualifying it as being
"First place academic standing amongst Information Systems and
Management (ISM) scholars".[10]
- The applicant makes exaggerated or untrue claims, such as
having won prizes or other recognition. Similarly, an applicant may
claim a scholarship was "for the most outstanding student entering
the University" when in fact multiple scholarships were
awarded.[11]
- The applicant refers to unknown, unverifiable awards, such as a
"Silver Medallion for Academic Excellence.",[12] or an
"Emeritus Professor Prize".[13]
- The applicant selectively reports, and uses unofficial terms:
rather than reporting an overall grade of credit, reports a
"Distinction Average in Finance; High Credit Average in Law.";[14]
similarly, a "Distinction average on all core information systems
subjects" helps circumvent unflattering grades in information
systems electives and other courses.[15] Both
"High Credit" and "core information systems subjects" are not
defined by the university (UNSW), and thus are used with
impunity.
Fraud
by active employees
There are other forms of fraudulent methods that employees of
jobs use to obtain payroll money from an employer without actually
performing any work. These involve blatant cheating, and do not
include those who perform at a sub par level.
These include:
- Moonlighting: The employee holds a
second night job in addition a regular daytime job that they
perform acceptably. At this second job, however, the employee
intentionally sleeps throughout the entire shift, unbeknownst to
the supervisor.
- Swiping in absence: The employee
arrives at the job site at the beginning of the shift and swipes in
to report to work. The employee promptly departs, and the absence
goes unnoticed in a large workplace. At the end of the shift, the
employee returns to swipe out.
- False signature: The employee who
is supposed to obtain a supervisor's signature to verify having
worked signs the form themselves after skipping work. Such acts are
usually possible with temp agencies, where contractors are
sent to a variety of job sites, and are not known personally by
those they would work with.
- Training pay: An applicant obtains
a job that will include a fixed amount of paid training. Once the
training is finished, the applicant promptly quits. The applicant's
original purpose was to obtain pay for training, but not do any
further work. Many employers who function this way combat this
problem by withholding payment for training until a certain amount
of work has been performed.
Depending on the nature of the offense, these violations may be
grounds for criminal prosecution for civil damages.
References
- ^
"Combat Resume Fraud".
Inquest Pre Employment Screening. http://www.inquestscreening.com/preemployment_background_Screeening_Combat_Resume_Fraud.asp. Retrieved
2007-07-26.
- ^
Fraudtrack 4
- ^
CIFAS - The Enemy
Within
- ^
BDO Fraudtrack 4
- ^
Powerchex Annual Survey
2008
- ^
A Degree of Creativity on
CVs
- ^
Powerchex Annual
Pre-employment Survey
- ^
dofonline
- ^
OnRec
- ^
Application 1 - Management Consulting. Retrieved December
9, 2007, from http://www.careers.unsw.edu.au/careerEd/jobApplications/resumes/ResCompSamples/SampleApplication1.pdf
- ^
Application 3 - Management Consulting. Retrieved December
9, 2007, from http://www.careers.unsw.edu.au/careerEd/jobApplications/resumes/ResCompSamples/SampleApplication3.pdf
- ^
Application 2 - Tourism Internship. Retrieved December 9,
2007, from http://www.careers.unsw.edu.au/careerEd/jobApplications/resumes/ResCompSamples/SampleApplication2.pdf
- ^
Application 3 - Management Consulting. Retrieved December
9, 2007, from http://www.careers.unsw.edu.au/careerEd/jobApplications/resumes/ResCompSamples/SampleApplication3.pdf
- ^
Application 4 - Law Clerk. Retrieved December 9, 2007,
from http://www.careers.unsw.edu.au/careerEd/jobApplications/resumes/ResCompSamples/SampleApplication4.pdf
- ^
Application 5 - Graduate IT Consultant. Retrieved December
9, 2007, from http://www.careers.unsw.edu.au/careerEd/jobApplications/resumes/ResCompSamples/SampleApplication5.pdf
Further
reading