4528.0 - Personal Fraud, 2010-2011 Quality Declaration
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 19/04/2012
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SNAPSHOT OF PERSONAL FRAUD VICTIMS OF PERSONAL FRAUD BY FRAUD TYPE, 2007 and 2010-11 (a) Persons may have been a victim of more than one fraud type so components may not add to total. Australians lost $1.4 billion in 2010-11 due to personal fraud. Three in five victims of personal fraud (60% or 713,600 persons) lost money, an average of $2,000 per victim who incurred a financial loss. The median loss for personal fraud was $300. This means that half the number of people who lost money due to personal fraud lost less than $300 and half lost more than $300. IDENTITY FRAUD In the 12 months prior to the survey, an estimated 702,100 Australians were victims of identity fraud, or 4.0% of the population aged 15 years and over. This is an increase from the 499,500 victims of identity fraud in 2007 (3.1%). CREDIT CARD FRAUD An estimated 662,300 Australians aged 15 years and over were victims of credit card fraud in the 12 months prior to interview, or 3.7% of the population aged 15 years and over. This is an increase from the 383,300 victims of credit card fraud in 2007 (2.4%). IDENTITY THEFT In the 12 months prior to survey in 2010-11, an estimated 44,700 Australians were victims of identity theft, or 0.3% of the population aged 15 years and over. This is a decrease from the 124,000 victims of identity theft in 2007 (0.8%). SCAMS According to the survey results, an estimated 6.4 million Australians were exposed to a scam in the 12 months prior to interview. This equated to just over a third (35.8%) of the Australian population aged 15 years and over – the same proportion as in 2007. An estimated 514,500 Australians aged 15 years and over (2.9%) responded to a scam in the 12 months prior to survey. This is an increase from the 329,000 victims (2.0%) that responded to a scam in 2007. COMPARISON OF FRAUD TYPES Australians were more likely to fall victim to credit card fraud (3.7%) than experience identity theft (0.3%) or a scam (2.9%), and more likely to become a victim of a scam (2.9%) than identity theft (0.3%). VICTIMISATION RATES BY PERSONAL FRAUD TYPE (a) Persons may have been a victim of more than one fraud type so components may not add to total. Reporting rates were higher for credit card fraud (49.9%) and identity theft (65.5%) than a scam (31.2%).
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