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Title: Collaborative Bank E-Fraud and Customers’ Reactions in Ado-Ekiti Metropolis, Ekiti State, Nigeria
Authors: ABRIFOR Chiedu Akporaro, EGBO Amechi Ken
OJO, OJIZIELE, Monday Oriabure Odunayo Tolulope
AKAN, ATINUKE Titilope Babalola Kevin Akpanke Kevin Akpanke
POPOOLA Sikiru Solagbade, Adebayo Anthony Abayomi
Keywords: Fraudulent
Monetary
Opportunity
Pressure
Rationalisation
Victims
Issue Date: 13-Sep-2024
Publisher: African Journal of Business and Economic Research (AJBER)
Citation: Pp483–500
Series/Report no.: VOLUME 19;ISSUE 3
Abstract: The high prevalent rate of banks e-frauds that is enthralling customers’ finance and bank integrity will soon begin to retard public trust and banks’ developmental purposes in Nigeria generally and specifically, Ekiti State if prompt actions are not taken against its effect. This paper examined the collaborative banks’ e-fraud and customers’ reactions in Ado-Ekiti Metropolis, Ekiti State. The paper was anchored in the fraud triangle theory to explain e-fraud, using three important elements (pressure, opportunity, and rationalisation). The qualitative data were generated from the respondents (bank staff, customers, and victims) respectively, using a purposive sampling technique. Thirty (30) key informant participants with adequate and information about collaborative banking e-fraud and customers’ reactions were selected for African Journal of Business and Economic Research (AJBER) (Online) ISSN 1750-4562 (Print) ISSN 1750-4554 Published consistently since 2006 Indexed by SCOPUS, UGC CARE List, IBSS, EBSCO, ProQuest, ABDC, SAJE, COPERNICUS, ERIH PLUS, CABELL, Sabinet and J-Gate Vol. 19, (Issue 3), September 2024 Pp483–500 the study. Key informant interviews were conducted, transcribed, and reported verbatim to complement the secondary data. The findings revealed that all the participants 30 (100%) had e-fraud awareness through various means ranging from 20 (66.7%) as victims of e-fraud to 6 (20%) through various social media platforms, and 4 (13.3%) as bank staff. The paper also revealed that some bank officials are culprits in bank e-fraud and that banks are not held liable for e-fraud committed against the customers and other related frauds. The study concluded that the effects of banking e-fraud on bank victims are immeasurable; therefore, timely intervention is highly required to reduce and curb the prevalence of e-fraud in the banking sector. The study recommended that banks should trained their employees to improve internal oversight mechanisms to identify and stop fraudulent activities, including e-fraud on the customer assets, while customers should be orientated on how to detect e-fraud tricks and report to relevant authorities for prompt actions.
Description: Collaborative Bank E-Fraud and Customers’ … 484 the study. Key informant interviews were conducted, transcribed, and reported verbatim to complement the secondary data. The findings revealed that all the participants 30 (100%) had e-fraud awareness through various means ranging from 20 (66.7%) as victims of e-fraud to 6 (20%) through various social media platforms, and 4 (13.3%) as bank staff. The paper also revealed that some bank officials are culprits in bank e-fraud and that banks are not held liable for e-fraud committed against the customers and other related frauds. The study concluded that the effects of banking e-fraud on bank victims are immeasurable; therefore, timely intervention is highly required to reduce and curb the prevalence of e-fraud in the banking sector. The study recommended that banks should trained their employees to improve internal oversight mechanisms to identify and stop fraudulent activities, including e-fraud on the customer assets, while customers should be orientated on how to detect e-fraud tricks and report to relevant authorities for prompt actions. Keywords: Fraudulent, Monetary, Opportunity, Pressure, Rationalisation, Victims. 1.1 Introduction The prevailing monetary fraud in most Nigerian financial institutions makes many banks more of monetary crime havens for fraudulent acts (Ololade, Salawu, & Adekanmi, 2020; Kingsley, 2012). It is so normalised to the extent that banking fraud cases made most news headlines on all social and print media platforms at intervals (Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation [NDIC], 2018). Hence, NDIC (2018), in its annual report, categorically listed 10 Nigerian banks and staff with the highest involvement in monetary fraud, costing the nation and its citizenry about N10.53 billion. Undoubtedly, these alarming fraudulent acts drastically reduce most customer trust and public trust and also retard the developmental purposes for which banking services were created and promoted in Nigeria. Nonetheless, the introduction of the cutting-edge Internet and the uptake of electronic payment systems have made cyber-attacks and e- frauds more common in banks in Nigeria (Ololade, Salawu, & Adekanmi, 2020). The perpetrators of most fraudulent acts in the banking sector are not exactly anonymous as it seems, as many of the monetary fraudulent
URI: http://repository.fuoye.edu.ng/handle/123456789/2417
ISSN: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31920/1750-4562/2024/v19n3a22
Appears in Collections:Department of Guidance AND Counselling

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