Granny square
Always planning a trip!
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2012
- Messages
- 2,753
I work in auditing and several years ago went to a conference hosted by a (now retired) world expert in auditing and fraud. At that time, our state was paying out a lot of money in post-Katrina programs. The expert said something that, once said, seems fairly self-evident, but isn't until you hear it. One of the unintended functions of any system is fraud. You can decrease the fraud over time by adjusting the system, but you will never get rid of it entirely. In other words, in any program that you put into place, someone out there is going to be looking at it to see how he/she can defraud that program. Once you plug those holes, someone else will be looking to find other ways to defraud the program. If you have really good regulators and auditors and buy-in from people who are aware of the program or system you can eventually reduce the fraud to the point that very few fraudsters get any money from the income stream. So new programs will have lots of fraud. Older, well-funded programs will have very little fraud. In any case, your ultimate choices are to either accept that there will be some amount of fraud and have the program (system) in place or not to have that program (system). The only way to have a system without fraud is to not have that system. So you can have a military with fraud, or you can have no military. You can have social programs to help feed those who are hungry with some amount of fraud, or you can have no program. It really put things into a new perspective for me.
Really good information and post