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Vulnerability and fraud: evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic

Business

Vulnerability and fraud: evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic

Y. Zhang, Q. Wu, et al.

This study by Yun Zhang, Qun Wu, Ting Zhang, and Lingxiao Yang explores the alarming rise of consumer fraud during the COVID-19 pandemic, revealing how scammers targeted those already vulnerable. Discover how financial literacy played a role in preventing fraud and the implications for future policies. Don't miss this intriguing research!... show more
Abstract
This study examines consumer fraud at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and provides novel evidence for the opportunity model of predatory victimization. Scammers have taken advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic shock to exploit victims who are already vulnerable and suffering. The number of fraud cases has greatly increased as COVID-19 spread across the U.S., consistent with the vulnerable-to-become-victimization hypothesis based on the opportunity model of predatory victimization. A Google Trends analysis shows that the increase in fraud and scams is attributable to victims' increased vulnerability rather than to their awareness of fraud and increased motivation to report scams. An improvement in financial literacy is associated with the reduction of finance-related fraud and scams. Finally, we provide important policy implications to protect people from fraud victimization.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Nov 28, 2022
Authors
Yun Zhang, Qun Wu, Ting Zhang, Lingxiao Yang
Tags
consumer fraud
COVID-19
vulnerability
financial literacy
scammers
victimization
policy implications
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