Two men in business suits sit at a restaurant table, smiling conspiratorially as they pass a box labeled "KICKBACK" filled with bundles of cash between them.
#WhatFraudstersLike #Kickbacks #AntiCorruption #CorporateGovernance #LetsTalkFraud

Fraudsters Like Kickbacks!

Ever wonder why massive frauds go undetected for years? Often, the watchdog is eating from the same bowl.

๐Ÿ’ผ Procurement Games - Vendors inflate prices and hand back a slice under the table.

๐Ÿฅ Healthcare Billing - Doctors or clinics get "referral fees" for unnecessary tests or prescriptions.

๐Ÿ—๏ธ Construction & Projects - Subcontractors win bids with cash-filled envelopes instead of competitive pricing.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Financial Services - Loan officers approve risky borrowers in exchange for kickbacks from brokers or the borrowers themselves.

๐ŸŒ Global Trade - Customs, logistics, and clearance speed up magically when palms are greased.

The Numbers Don't Lie: The World Bank estimates businesses and individuals pay over $1.5 trillion in bribes every year โ€“ roughly 2% of global GDP. Thatโ€™s a lot of "consulting fees" with no reports delivered. That's nearly the combined GDP of the UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, and Bahrain - vanishing into pockets every year[ref].

๐Ÿšจ What can we do?

Companies: Rotate duties, enforce transparent vendor selection, and audit payments regularly but most importantly - leverage anonymous reporting channels - make it safe to speak up.

Employees: Say no immediately. Kickbacks may feel like 'everyone does it,' but they create paper trails that turn into prison time.

๐Ÿšฉ Red Flags Auditors & Managers Should Watch For:

โ— Same vendors winning contracts repeatedly without competitive bidding

โ— Invoices with round numbers (e.g., exactly $10,000, $50,000)

โ— "Consulting fees" with no deliverables or reports

โ— Payments to vendors in high-risk jurisdictions

โ— Unusual payment patterns (e.g., just below approval thresholds)

Bottom line: Kickbacks aren't victimless. They inflate costs, reward incompetence, and ultimately, taxpayers and customers foot the bill. The next time you see an unusually expensive project or service, ask yourself: who's getting paid on the side?