Publication | Closed Access
Internal audit function, audit committee effectiveness and accountability in the Ugandan statutory corporations
85
Citations
51
References
2018
Year
AuditingUgandan Statutory CorporationsContinuous AuditingAccountingAccounting PolicyManagementBusinessAudit Committee EffectivenessAudit RegulationCorporate GovernanceAudit QualityAudit OversightInternal Audit FunctionAccounting AuditEffective Internal AuditAudit Market Structure
Purpose The purpose of this study is to investigate the contribution of internal audit function and audit committee effectiveness on accountability in statutory corporations (SCs). Design/methodology/approach This study is cross sectional and correlational. Data have been collected through a questionnaire survey of 52 SCs in Uganda through their Chief Internal Auditors and Chief Finance Officers. Data have been analysed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences. Findings The internal audit function significantly contributes to accountability of SCs in Uganda and audit committee effectiveness is not where effective internal audit is present in such organisations. However, audit committee effectiveness significantly contributes to accountability when an internal audit function is not present. Research limitations/implications The use of hierarchical regression is prone to problems associated with sampling error. However, the likelihood of these problems is mitigated by the interface with data. Originality/value Whereas hitherto both internal audit function and audit committee effectiveness had been viewed as explanations of accountability, this study only confirms the internal audit function as a significant predictor of SCs’ accountability relative to audit committee effectiveness.
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