Factors Eliciting Corporate Fraud in Emerging Markets: Case of Firms Subject to Enforcement Actions in Malaysia

This study investigates the key factors that elicit financial reporting fraud among companies in Malaysia. Using enforcement action releases issued by the Security Commission of Malaysia (SC) and Bursa Malaysia, we identify a sample of 76 firms that had committed financial reporting fraud during the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Business and the Ethical Implications of Technology 2019-12, Vol.160 (2), p.587-608
Hauptverfasser: Ghafoor, Abdul, Zainudin, Rozaimah, Mahdzan, Nurul Shahnaz
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Mahdzan, Nurul Shahnaz
description This study investigates the key factors that elicit financial reporting fraud among companies in Malaysia. Using enforcement action releases issued by the Security Commission of Malaysia (SC) and Bursa Malaysia, we identify a sample of 76 firms that had committed financial reporting fraud during the period of 1996-2016. We use the fraud triangle framework and the Malaysian International Standards on Auditing 240 to identify the factors. Since the simple probit model fails to address the identification problem (partial observability), we estimate our results using a bivariate probit model. The new model estimates the effects of pressure, opportunity, and rationalization on the probability of fraud likelihood by disentangling the detection probability of fraud. Among several proxies used for pressure, our results suggest that aggressive tax reporting and financial difficulties increase the likelihood of fraud commission. In regard to opportunity, we find that dedicated institutional investors, independence of the board, effective audit committee, and the presence of a female on the board provide active monitoring and oversight in reducing fraud occurrence. Results for rationalization suggest that prior violations and frequent changes of external auditors increase the chances of fraud occurrence. This research offers possible insights to auditors, managers, and regulators to prevent, detect, and react to fraud. Specifically, it highlights the specific factors that may exacerbate the fraudulent intentions of firms.
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source Education Source (EBSCOhost); Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals; PAIS Index; Business Source Complete; JSTOR
subjects Audit committees
Audits
Business and Management
Business Ethics
Companies
Education
Emerging markets
Enforcement
Ethics
Financial reporting
Fraud
Identification
Independence
Institutional investments
International standards
Investors
Management
Markets
Original Paper
Oversight
Philosophy
Quality of Life Research
Rationalization
Taxation
Violations
title Factors Eliciting Corporate Fraud in Emerging Markets: Case of Firms Subject to Enforcement Actions in Malaysia
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