Brick-and-Mortar Retail

Retailers Lose Billions to Theft, Fraud and Human Error

Being a brick-and-mortar retailer isn’t easy these days. Aside from the obvious problem of having to compete with thousands of online retailers, you also must deal with shoplifters, dishonest employees and organized criminals taking a bite out of your bottom line. According to a report by the National Retail Federation, U.S. retailers lose 1.33 percent of sales on average to inventory shrink, i.e. a loss of inventory related to theft, shoplifting, error or fraud, costing the U.S. retail economy a total of $46.8 billion in 2017.

Having surveyed 63 retailers in the spring of 2018, the NRF found that shoplifting by external actors (including organized retail crime) was the biggest source of inventory loss in 2017, accounting for 35.7 percent of shrinkage on average. Internal theft by employees and others was close behind however, which is why most retailers take measures to ensure the integrity of potential employees, such as criminal conviction checks, verification of employment history, personal references and drug screenings.

Description

This chart shows the sources of inventory shrinkage suffered by U.S. brick-and-mortar retailers in 2017.

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Average inventory shrinkage percentage among U.S. retailers 2016-2022
Median inventory shrinkage percentage among U.S. retailers 2016-2022
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Breakdown of U.S. retailers' inventory shrinkage percentage in 2022
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Total retail sales in the United States 1992-2023
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Canada: sales of retail trade 2012-2022
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Total and e-commerce U.S. retail trade sales 2000-2023

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