Retail theft is up according to university study
Boca Raton, Fla (USA)
Retail
theft, including shoplifting, employee theft, administrative error and
vendor fraud, is up, according to a recent annual survey conducted by
the University of Florida with a funding grant from ADT Security
Services. The National Retail Security Survey (NRSS) preliminary
results show a real increase in the rate of retail theft for the first
time in six years. In 2007, the lowest rate of retail theft in the
18-year history of the survey was reported at a rate of 1.44 percent of
overall retail sales. Last year that rate rose to 1.52 percent of sales
translating into losses of USD 36.5 billion.
These
preliminary shoplifting and retail theft rates are calculated as a
percentage of total sales and for the previous six years of the survey
they have been trending downward, according to University of Florida
criminologist Richard Hollinger, Ph.D., who directed the National
Retail Security Survey.
"This year both the dollar loss and
rate of loss increased and the evidence shows that the economy and
resulting cutbacks in staffing by retailers are creating an
opportunistic environment for both individual shoplifters and organized
retail criminals," he said. "These are preliminary numbers from 2008
and do not reflect shoplifting and retail theft rates from the first
part of 2009 when the recession was considered by many to be at its
deepest."
Employee theft is still the largest portion of the
retail theft pie, although as a percentage it decreased slightly while
shoplifting increased in 2008. The survey only reflects in-store
organized retail crime and does not measure crimes such as cargo theft
or merchandise stolen in transport, but it does show a steady increase
in the number of reported organized retail crime incidents per retailer
and an increase in the dollar amount per incident.
"Retailers
are facing one of the most challenging shoplifting and theft
environments in history," said Jeff Bean, vice president ADT retail
sales and operations. "As the largest provider of electronic retail
security in the world, we are working with our customers to provide
them with the technologies and tools that can help them do more with
less by maximizing their resources to help keep losses down."
There
are a number of new technologies available to retailers that provide
them with increased store intelligence and help them to maximize
resources and limit losses. New software is capable of analyzing video
to detect unusual behaviors and track would-be shoplifters through a
store. Retailers can use the software as a very effective tool in the
fight against retail theft and at the same time it can be used to study
shopping behaviors and patterns to ultimately help improve overall
store operations.
New anti-shoplifting tags allow retailers to
protect more items securely while leaving them in the open for the
convenience of shoppers. Items are protected without making the
customer wait or requiring extra staff to retrieve merchandise from
under a counter or the back storage room. Point-of-sale analytic
software, people counting and remote monitoring are other technologies
that allow retailers to not only reduce shoplifting and theft, but also
to operate more efficiently.
"The survey is in line with what
we have been hearing from retailers about increased shoplifting and
organized retail crime in very tough economic times," said Joe La
Rocca, loss prevention advisor for the National Retail Federation. "It
shows the need for focusing continued efforts on enacting laws to limit
these types of crimes and educating the public about purchasing bargain
items from questionable sources."