Determinant of auditors’ judgment on the detection of fraudulent financial statements / Lanny and Wiwik Utami

This study aimed to assess auditors’ capacity to detect financial statement fraud. This study examined three variables that are thought to influence auditors’ judgment: (1) auditors’ independence, (2) auditors’ understanding of corporate governance principles, and (3) auditors’ knowledge about the E...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lanny, Utami, Wiwik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UiTM Press 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/76888/1/76888.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/76888/
https://mar.uitm.edu.my
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Institution: Universiti Teknologi Mara
Language: English
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Summary:This study aimed to assess auditors’ capacity to detect financial statement fraud. This study examined three variables that are thought to influence auditors’ judgment: (1) auditors’ independence, (2) auditors’ understanding of corporate governance principles, and (3) auditors’ knowledge about the Electronic Knowledge Repository (EKR). The Public Accounting Firms characteristic was considered as moderating variables. The research population consisted of auditors at Jakarta’s Public Accounting Firms (PAFs). Cluster sampling was used to choose the sample, which consisted of PAFs affiliated with overseas PAFs and unaffiliated PAFs. Each cluster was chosen depending on the desire of each respondent to participate. The number of respondents participating was 155 auditors, consisting of 77 foreign affiliated PAFs auditors and 78 non-affiliated PAF auditors. A questionnaire was utilized to evaluate the auditors’ ability to assess possible fraud based on case studies. The study concludes that auditors’ independence, corporate governance expertise, and EKR knowledge have a favorable effect on auditors’ ability to detect financial statement fraud. PAFs affiliate was not a moderating variable but a predictor variable. Gender moderated the relationship between GCG and audit judgement. The Financial Services Authority and PAFs may use the research’s findings to improve the service quality of Public Accountants.