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Purpose

– The purpose of this paper is to test the association between national culture dimensions and exposure to fraud with a view to drawing implications for understanding fraud risk.

Design/methodology/approach

– The study is based on a sample of 66 countries. Regression analysis is conducted using Hofstede’s national culture dimensions as independent variables and fraud risk as a dependent variable. Transparency International’s corruption index was used as a proxy for fraud risk.

Findings

– Results suggest high fraud risk exposure in countries with high power distance and those having limited long-term orientations.

Research limitations/implications

– The study informs deeper understanding of fraud risk through analysis of fraud risk in a culturally relative sense.

Originality/value

– This is the first study (known to the author) to draw the implications of national culture for understanding fraud risk.

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