Electronic Tax Fraud - Are There 'Sales Zappers' in Japan?

R. T. Ainsworth
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Although there is no public acknowledgement - in the press, in a court case, though any announcement by the Japanese National Tax Administration, or in any academic studies or papers - that Zappers and Phantom-ware are a fraud problem in Japan, a number of factors suggest that Japan may be very fertile ground for technology-assisted cash skimming fraud. Those factors include: (1) a high concentration of small to medium sized businesses; (2) the fact that the retail economy is highly cash-based; and (3) the high level of technology acceptance in the Japanese retail sector - electronic cash registers (ECRs) and point of sale (POS) networks are commonly employed in the retail trade. It is something of an anomaly that this kind of fraud appears to be a very serious and well documented in wide range of developed countries (Canada, the Netherlands, Germany, Brazil, Australia and Sweden) but it does not appear to be visible in the two largest developed economies Japan and the United States. The US has two cases; Japan has reported none. Although it may be possible that Zappers and Phantom-ware are not in use in the US and Japan, it seems more likely that they are being used (perhaps widely) but that insufficient (or technologically limited) audit resources are committed to computer fraud detection in the small and medium sized business sector. Detecting Zapper and Phantom-ware fraud requires auditors to break down and analyze the programming of modern ECRs and POS systems. There are three major sections to this paper. The first section outlines the historical development of Zappers and Phantom-ware. The second measures the significance of this fraud. Two measures are used direct and indirect. The direct uses the few (empirical) studies that governments have made public on this problem. The indirect measure considers the case law which shows that large amounts of cash have been diverted by these programs, and that once established in a marketplace large numbers of businesses follow one another in adopting this technology. The final section considers government responses. The paper concludes, that if the Japanese National Tax Administration perceives Phantom-ware and Zappers to be a serious threat to revenue, and if Japan would like to consider a rules-based (fiscal memory) solution as opposed to a principles-based (comprehensive traditional audits supplemented with enhanced training in technology) solution, then the Greek, Quebec and German approaches to this problem need to be looked at carefully. This is an approach that fights technology with technology.
电子骗税——日本有“销售骗子”吗?
尽管没有公开承认——无论是在媒体上,在法庭上,还是在日本国家税务总局的任何声明中,或者在任何学术研究或论文中——Zappers和Phantom-ware在日本是一个欺诈问题,但许多因素表明,日本可能是技术辅助的现金欺诈的肥沃土壤。这些因素包括:(1)中小企业高度集中;(2)零售经济高度以现金为基础;(3)日本零售业的高技术接受程度——电子收银机(ecr)和销售点(POS)网络在零售业中普遍使用。这类欺诈行为在许多发达国家(加拿大、荷兰、德国、巴西、澳大利亚和瑞典)似乎是非常严重和有案可查的,但在两个最大的发达经济体日本和美国似乎并不明显,这是一种反常现象。美国有两个案例;日本没有报告。尽管Zappers和Phantom-ware可能没有在美国和日本使用,但更有可能的是它们正在被使用(也许是广泛使用),但中小型企业部门用于计算机欺诈检测的审计资源不足(或技术有限)。检测Zapper和Phantom-ware欺诈要求审计员分解和分析现代ecr和POS系统的编程。本文主要分为三个部分。第一部分概述了Zappers和Phantom-ware的历史发展。第二种方法衡量这种欺诈的重要性。采用直接和间接两种方法。直接使用了政府在这个问题上公开的少数(实证)研究。间接措施考虑了判例法,这些判例法表明,这些项目转移了大量现金,并且一旦在市场上建立起来,大量企业就会效仿采用这种技术。最后一部分考虑政府的反应。论文的结论是,如果日本国家税务总局认为Phantom-ware和Zappers是对收入的严重威胁,如果日本愿意考虑基于规则(财政记忆)的解决方案,而不是基于原则(全面的传统审计辅以加强的技术培训)的解决方案,那么希腊、魁北克和德国解决这个问题的方法需要仔细研究。这是一种以技术对抗技术的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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