Operational governanace and occupational fraud risk fraud risk in commercial banks in Kenya: A positivism approach
Abstract
Association of Certified Fraud Examiners caution that globally, a typical organization loses at least 5% its annual revenue through occupational fraud. Further statistics indicate that occupational fraud risk is highest in commercial banks than any other industry globally.
Occupational fraud risk is therefore a global problem. The problem is that Kenya has the highest incidences of fraud is East Africa. The study set to determine the effect of operational governance on occupational fraud risk in commercial banks in Kenya. Using a positivism research paradigm and a descriptive research design, a representative stratified sample of 30 commercial banks out of the 43 commercial banks licensed by Central Bank of Kenya by June 30, 2012 was used in this study. Principal Component Analysis, Varimax, Orthogonal was used for Factor analysis. Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin test of sampling adequacy was used together with Bartlett’s test of Sphericity to assess factorability of the predictor variable. Cronbach’s alpha coefficient was used to assess the data collection tool for stability and consistency. Factor analysis was used to asses construct validity. In order to test the null hypothesis, that is, there is
no relationship between operational governance and occupational fraud risk in commercial banks in Kenya, model fitness, ANOVA and Regression coefficients were generated and interpreted.
The study found that there is a positive but weak correlation between operational governance and occupational fraud risk. Further, the study found that the relationship is not statistically significant.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Collections
- Faculty of Education (FEd) [1042]