dc.description.abstract |
Fraudulent financial reporting is the most expensive forms of fraud among the three
forms of fraud. There have been cases of fraudulent financial reporting among banks
worldwide which has led to some of them being winded up. The audit committee
therefore is responsible for overseeing the financial reporting process in any
organization hence preventing the occurrence of financial statement fraud. The
purpose of this research was to investigate the effect of Audit committee
characteristics on fraudulent financial reporting in commercial banks in Kenya. The
General objective of this study was to determine the moderating effect of CEO tenure
on the relationship between Audit committee characteristics and fraudulent financial
reporting. The research specific objectives were to; determine the effect of Audit
committee size, Audit committee independence, Audit committee Financial expertise
and audit committee gender diversity on fraudulent financial reporting in Commercial
banks in Kenya and to determine the moderating effect of CEO tenure on the
relationship between Audit committee size, Audit committee independence, Audit
committee Financial expertise and audit committee gender diversity on fraudulent
financial reporting in commercial banks in Kenya. The theories used in this study
were the Agency theory and Fraud pentagon theory. The research design used was
explanatory research design and the year of observation was 2018 to 2022. The target
population of the study was all commercial banks in Kenya. Secondary data obtained
from the audited financial reports of 39 banks over a period of 5 years were used in
the study. The panel data was analyzed using both descriptive and inferential
statistics. Descriptive statistical techniques specifically mean, standard deviation,
median, minimum and maximum were used. Inferential statistics that is moderated
regression analysis and correlation analysis were used to predict and explain the
nature and significance of relationships between the independent and dependent
variables. The control variables; Firm Size (β=-0.085, p<0.05) and Firm Age (β=-
0.070, p<0.05) had a significant negative relationship on Fraudulent Financial
Reporting. Audit committee characteristics were found to have a significant effect on
Fraudulent Financial Reporting with its effects moderated by CEO Tenure. The
results indicated that Audit committee size (β= -0.43, p<0.05), Audit Committee
Independence (β= -0.236, p<0.05) and Audit Committee Gender Diversity (β= -0.42,
p<0.05) had a negative and significant effect on fraudulent financial reporting. On the
other hand Audit Committee Financial Expertise (β=0.043, p<0.05) had a positive and
significant effect on fraudulent financial reporting. The moderating effect of CEO
tenure on the relationship between Audit Committee Characteristics and Fraudulent
financial reporting indicated that CEO tenure significantly moderates the relationship
between Audit Committee Independence (β=0.002, p<0.05, Audit Committee
Financial Expertise (β=-0.003, p<0.05) and Fraudulent Financial Reporting while the
relationship between Audit Committee Size (β=0.002, p>0.05), Audit Committee
Gender Diversity (β=-0.001, p>0.05) and Fraudulent Financial Reporting is not
significantly moderated by CEO Tenure. The study findings inform the banking
institutions to advocating for larger and diverse audit committees, enhancing
independence, and prioritizing financial expertise and gender diversity in Audit
committee recruitment. It also encourage robust CEO succession plans to ensure
governance stability and reduced fraudulent financial reporting. Further research can
be done on other Audit committee characteristics, For instance: Frequency of Audit
committee meeting, Audit committee tenure and Audit committee competency. |
en_US |