NAB chief executive Ross McEwan (left) and Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones say consumers and companies need to take accountability for scams.Credit:Jesse Marlow
NAB chief executive Ross McEwan said the move would help make Australia a “very unacceptable place” for crime organisations.
In 2022,text messages were the most common way scammers targeted Australians,with one-third of scams distributed via that medium,according to the Australian Consumer and Competition Commission (ACCC),and cost $28 million.
Last year,NAB sent 112 million text messages to customers,of which about 40 million contained links intended to notify clients about developments such as when an account was close to being overdrawn or a new debit card had been posted.
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McEwan said the initiative would cost the bank more and require it to have more people making phone calls,but that it was also finding other ways to direct customers.
“We’ve put on another 50-odd people just in the last couple of months to build our calling capability,” he said. “And in the body of the texts we send,we might ask people to go to a website or tell them we will be sending an email with instructions to follow.”
McEwan said NAB had recordeda 38 per cent increase in total customer scam reports,and that the bank needed to put “a little bit more friction” into the payments process to intercept them.