Off the wire
Vietnam implants microchips in captive elephants for 1st time  • 2nd LD Writethru: 2 killed, 14 soldiers injured in S. Afghan blast  • Xinhua summary of Asia-Pacific stocks news at 1130 GMT, Dec. 27  • Spotlight: Anti-vaccine parents increase in Turkey due to health risk claims  • China, Afghanistan to strengthen military cooperation  • Urgent: Putin submits documents for nomination as 2018 presidential candidate  • Commentary: Time to end the "China Threat" mindset  • Heavy snowfall causes highway closure, electricity cut in Kyrgyzstan  • Israeli court convicts Palestinian youth of murdering  • Albania's prosecution demands mandate revocation for two MPs  
You are here:  

Self-scan shoplifters steal 4.2 bln USD a year in Britain

Xinhua,December 27, 2017 Adjust font size:

LONDON, Dec. 27 (Xinhua) -- Light-fingered Britons are stealing 3.2 billion pounds (about 4.2 billion U.S. dollars) of goods through self-service tills each year, with almost one in four people admitting taking at least one item without paying for it, local newspaper reported Wednesday.

Theft from unmanned checkouts has more than doubled over the past four years, according to a study cited by The Times newspaper, raising questions about viability of the devices in some stores in Britain.

The loss equates to five pounds, or some 6.7 U.S. dollars, of goods per Briton per month, the newspaper said.

"Toiletries, fruit and veg and dairy products are the most common items taken and almost half of people who steal from the checkouts claim to do so regularly," it reported.

When asked why they had not paid for an item, two fifths of people who had stolen something said they did so because they knew they could get away with it.

The study also suggested the high theft rate is not entirely because of a collapse in public morals but because the machines do not always work properly.

There are an estimated 50,000 self-service tills across Britain, according to the newspaper. Enditem