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View Full Version : A lot of knicking going on in Britain


Old Mr. Grace
10-05-2005, 06:21 AM
Where's Mr. Clegg when you need him? :(

Updated: 6:38 a.m. ET Oct. 5, 2005
LONDON - Britons are the most prolific shoplifters in Europe, a survey published on Wednesday showed.

They stole $6.29 billion (3.58 billion pounds) of goods from their nation?s shops last year, the equivalent of 1.59 percent of British retail turnover.

Razor blades were the most stolen item followed by alcohol and toiletries, according to the British-based Center for Retail Research.

Finland had the second worst shoplifting problem followed by Portugal and Greece while the Swiss were the most disciplined shoppers, the survey showed. Theft accounted for 0.89 percent of Swiss retail turnover.

In all, Europeans stole $36.72 billion (30.8 billion euros) worth of goods from their stores last year -- 71.5 euros per person.

Customers were blamed for 48 percent of the thefts, staff for 29 percent and suppliers for 7 percent.

The survey covered 423 retailers in 24 countries, accounting for 20 percent of European retail turnover.

Copyright 2005 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.

frankdicer
10-05-2005, 08:55 AM
Any stats on theft in U.S. ....for comparison?

Old Mr. Grace
10-05-2005, 09:18 AM
Here you go, Frankdicer.


The latest National Retail Security Survey reports that losses from employee theft have reached record levels and that total inventory shrinkage cost U.S. retailers $32.3 billion last year, up from $29 billion the year before.

According to University of Florida criminologist Richard C. Hollinger, Ph.D., who directs the National Retail Security Survey, the results indicate that in 2000, retailers lost 1.75 percent of their total annual sales to shrink, up from 1.69 percent the prior year. Hollinger said that the results of the survey should serve as a wake-up call to the retail industry that shrinkage continues to be a multi-billion dollar source of revenue loss.

Where Inventory Shrinkage Happens
Employee Theft 46%
Shoplifting 30.6%
Administrative Error 17.6%
Vendor Fraud 5.8%
The study, conducted by the University of Florida with a funding grant from ADT Security Services, Inc., a unit of Tyco Fire and Security Services, discovered that retail security managers attributed more than 46 percent of their losses to the thefts of disgruntled workers. In comparison, 31 percent of retail losses were the result of shoplifters. Employee theft was up 2 percentage points from the previous study.

Internal theft now costs U.S. retailers $14.9 billion annually, compared to shoplifting costs of $10 billion. Employee theft and shoplifting combined account for the largest source of property crime committed annually in the United States.

The remainder of the annual retail losses are due to paperwork errors at 17.6 percent and theft by vendors at 5.8 percent, according to the data obtained by analyzing theft incidents from 116 of the largest U.S. retail chains.

"Given that the surveyed portion of the retail economy annually transacts over $1.845 trillion dollars, this percentage of loss is worth over $32 billion," Hollinger said. "This means that the single largest category of larceny in the United States is the crime that occurs in retail stores. This figure is larger than motor vehicle theft, bank robbery or household burglary combined."

"With the uncertainty in consumer confidence and warnings of a slow shopping season, retailers need to look beyond the selling floor to increase and protect their profits," said Mike Snyder, president of ADT Security Services. "Technologies such as anti-shoplifting systems, digital video surveillance and point of sale monitoring solutions, tied together with remote and central station monitoring, will help retailers contain some of these losses without sacrificing good customer service."

What can retailers do to deter shoplifters and employee theft?
Provide good customer service
Use anti-shoplifting systems
Use video surveillance
Improve job satisfaction levels of retail sales associates
More...
"In today's environment of heightened awareness about increased security measures it's becoming increasingly important for retailers to address the security lapses that allow these kinds of losses. In the end, it is the consumers who will have to pay the price for shrinkage in the form of higher retail prices," Hollinger concluded.

From Melody Vargas,
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Greg WibblyWobbly
10-06-2005, 02:41 AM
:lol: :lol: Pay them a little more and they won't have to steal !!! :lol: