FRAUD PENTAGON THEORY: INDICATION TOWARD FRAUDULENT FINANCIAL REPORTING ON NON-BANKING SECTOR
Dublin Core
Title
FRAUD PENTAGON THEORY: INDICATION TOWARD FRAUDULENT FINANCIAL REPORTING ON NON-BANKING SECTOR
Subject
fraud pentagon, fraudulent financial reporting, financial report
Description
This study aimed to analyze the influence of the five elements in fraud pentagon theory to detect an indication of fraudulent financial reporting. Fraud pentagon consists of pressure which is proxied by financial stability, financial target, and external pressure, opportunity which is proxied by ineffective monitoring and nature of the industry, rationalization which is proxied by change of auditor and total accrual ratio, a competence which proxied by change of director, and arrogance which proxied by CEO’s picture frequency. The indication of fraudulent financial reporting which is proxied by restatement serves as the dependent variable. This study uses purposive sampling to select a representative sample. The sample is 37 financial non-banking companies that were listed on Indonesia Stock Exchange during the period 2017-2019, resulting in 111 firm-observation. The collected data is analyzed using logistic regression. The results of this study show that all variables which consist of financial stability, financial target, external pressure, ineffective monitoring, nature of the industry, change of auditor, total accrual ratio, change of director, and CEO’s picture frequency do not have significant influent to the indication of fraudulent financial reporting
Creator
Fera Tjahjani1*), Briantama Maulidza Rizky1), Widanarni Pudjiastuti1), Nawang Kalbuana2
Source
https://jurnal.stie-aas.ac.id/index.php/IJEBAR
Date
2022
Contributor
peri irawan
Format
pdf
Language
english
Type
text
Files
Collection
Citation
Fera Tjahjani1*), Briantama Maulidza Rizky1), Widanarni Pudjiastuti1), Nawang Kalbuana2, “FRAUD PENTAGON THEORY: INDICATION TOWARD FRAUDULENT FINANCIAL REPORTING ON NON-BANKING SECTOR,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed April 20, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/7928.