Audio By Carbonatix
An anti-Fraud Professional and Lecturer, Ransford Nana Addo Jnr, has warned that employee fraud is widespread and affects all types of businesses and even homes.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show, he said, “Employee fraud is something that nobody or no business is spared, from banking to aviation, telecom, even our domestic helps.”
He shared a telling example of a house help who gave her employers a sudden notice that she would be leaving. “They said she should go and bring her things so they could drop her at the station. The bag she brought out compared to what she brought in years ago was something else.
"To shock you, they found provisions enough to set up a business in her hometown,” he recounted. “The kids she was supposed to take care of, they were three, were meant to take a tin of milk every day. But she used a tin for them the whole week or two before they drank one. The rest were being stored for a provision business in the village.”
Mr Addo Jnr explained that people who engage in this kind of fraud are often those seen as hardworking and trustworthy.
“Their hard work will take your eyes off their tricks,” he said. “You go to a mechanic shop very hardworking man and he’ll say, ‘Don’t worry, our boss. This thing is very expensive, if you bring it here, we know how to get it for you.’ But meanwhile, he is not stealing your lubricants, or your money but he is pushing your customers away
He warned that employee fraud can quietly destroy a business. “You’ll be there thinking nothing is missing, but gradually your business is going to shrink.”
To manage employee fraud, he suggested several approaches. One is to completely avoid business types where fraud risk cannot be managed. Another is to transfer the risk through insurance packages, like employee fidelity plans, or outsource that part of the business to people with time and resources to manage it. A third option is to mitigate the risk directly by being deliberate about internal controls. The last option which he discouraged is to simply accept the risk and do nothing about it.
“There are people who say, ‘I’ve brought 50 vehicles, I don’t care who runs away with one. I’ll keep praying and hope God sends me good people.’ But if you really want to deal with these things, you have to be very intentional,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
World Bank lauds Ghana’s macroeconomic stabilisation efforts
3 minutes -
IMF, World Bank, IEA unveil joint plan to stabilise energy markets
4 minutes -
Ghana declares its first-ever Marine Protected Area
4 minutes -
Middle East tension slashes IMF global growth to 3.1% for 2026
9 minutes -
TMA reopens daycare centre after microlight-aircraft crash
14 minutes -
We’re financing gov’t policy – COMAC CEO warns of mounting industry debt
15 minutes -
Kofi Arko Nokoe represents Ghana at the 2026 IMF Young Parliamentarians Initiative
18 minutes -
Fuel ‘relief’ not from gov’t – COMAC CEO says fuel cuts are industry burden
35 minutes -
Back to books – Sweden’s schools give up digital learning
1 hour -
From One Day to One Ring: Leo Woodall joins new The Lord of the Rings cast
1 hour -
India to decide women’s quota bill as row over parliamentary seats intensifies
1 hour -
Australia’s richest person must share part of her mining fortunes, court rules
2 hours -
BBC to cut almost one in 10 staff to make £500m savings
2 hours -
Google to punish sites that trap people in with back button tricks
2 hours -
Booking.com customers warned of ‘reservation hijacking’ after hack
2 hours