Fight against cybercrime lacks breadth. Almost 40% of senior managers interviewed in the 13th edition of the Ernst and Young (EY) survey on cybercrime consider that fraud and corruption are widespread in their respective countries. The “Overcoming Compliance Fatigue” survey interviewed more than 2,700 company CEOs in 59 countries. The study shows that senior managers are less likely than their teams to take part in antifraud or anticorruption training (38%) or in fraud- and corruption-risk assessment processes (30%). One EY expert said this is alarming, “given that these executives are apparently exposed to circumstances which threaten their integrity on a regular basis”: 21% of CEOs and 10% of all senior managers said that they had been approached to pay a bribe in the past. The survey also found that compliance fatigue within businesses appears to have set in at a time when they can least afford it. 1) One in five businesses still do not have an ABAC (anti-bribery and anti-fraud policy); 2) 45% of organisations have not introduced a whistleblowing hotline; 3) less than 50% of respondents have attended ABAC training; and 4) less than a third of businesses are conducting anti-corruption due diligence as part of their mergers and acquisitions process. (IL)