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Ghana among Africa’s most vulnerable to digital fraud- Report

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Ghana ranks as one of the three most vulnerable countries in Africa to digital fraud, according to the first-ever Global Fraud Index released by Sumsub, an Africa-based verification platform.

The report places Ghana alongside Algeria and Ethiopia as the most at-risk countries on the continent.

The Global Fraud Index, which examined 103 countries worldwide, aims to assist governments, regulators, and businesses in understanding and mitigating digital fraud. It also sheds light on the root causes driving fraud across regions.

Sumsub’s analysis attributed Ghana’s high fraud vulnerability to economic challenges, inadequate government interventions, and low accessibility to anti-fraud resources.

The 2024 State of Inclusive Instant Payment Systems (SIIPS) in Africa Report by the AfricaNenda Foundation highlights digital fraud as a major barrier to financial inclusion. Alongside high accessibility costs and weak data protection, fraud contributes to the exclusion of over 400 million African adults from digital and financial ecosystems.

Sumsub identified key factors that increase a country’s susceptibility to digital fraud:

To address its digital fraud challenges, Sumsub recommends:

Juniper Research predicts that global losses from online payment fraud will surpass $362 billion between 2023 and 2028, signalling an urgent need for robust fraud prevention in digital payment sectors.

Highlights of the Global Fraud Index for Africa

This inaugural report by Sumsub emphasises the critical need for African nations, including Ghana, to invest in digital fraud mitigation strategies to foster trust and inclusion in their financial ecosystems.

Read the full report here:checklist_fraud_defense

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