This report presents the results of a study undertaken at the request of
the American Electronics Association and a consortium of high-tech
industries. Based on a nine-month survey of 95 firms, representing
approximately 40 percent of the sales volume for the computer,
semiconductor, hard disk drive, and cellular telephone industries, the
authors estimate that direct costs of hardware theft are almost $250
million. Indirect costs (such as lost sales and expensive
theft-reduction strategies) and industry losses could push total losses
past $5 billion. Industry and consumers share the price of high-tech
losses, but firms do not always have the economic incentive to invest in
appropriate security measures. Since 1996, hardware theft has declined
significantly, and recent security measures adopted by individual firms
appear to be very cost-effective. The authors recommend more such
investments and suggest that the largest payoff will come from
anticipating what products are most vulnerable and devising targeted
procedures to protect them. In addition, they recommend strengthening
collaborative industry-law enforcement efforts to help track the threat,
anticipate targets, and identify and disable stolen property.