Influence of the Quality of Implementation of Islamic Corporate Governance and Complexity on the Frequency of Fraud in Sharia Banking in Indonesia

Suharto Suharto, Priyarsono DS, Trias Andati

Abstract


The purpose of this study is to explore the quality of Islamic Corporate Governance in sharia banking in Indonesia and analyze the effect of the quality of Islamic Corporate Governance implementation and bank complexity on the frequency of fraud in sharia banking in Indonesia from 2011 through 2020. This study uses a descriptive method with a quantitative approach. The population in this study were all Indonesian sharia commercial banks based on banking statistics issued by the Financial Services Authority (OJK) in December 2020, which were 14 sharia commercial banking, then selected by the purposive sampling method using sharia commercial banking criteria that reported a complete self-assessment report during 2011 – 2020, which is as many as 10 sharia commercial banking. The type of data used is secondary data whose data collection is carried out by online data search methods through website searches. The data analysis method used panel data regression. The results of the study showed that the quality of Islamic Corporate Governance implementation at sharia commercial banking during 2011 - 2020 on average had a "good" predicate, minimum value (best implementation quality "very good", and maximum value (lowest implementation quality " good enough". The implementation of Islamic Corporate Governance in sharia commercial banking BUKU III is better than sharia commercial banking BUKU II and BUKU I. The results also show that the quality of Islamic Corporate Governance implementation has a significant effect on fraud with an estimated coefficient of 1.3251, meaning that if the composite ICG value increases (the quality of ICG implementation decreases) by 1 unit, then fraud will increase by 1.3251 units. Then, the complexity has no effect on the frequency of fraud with a probability value of 0.1651 > 0.05 (α=5%), meaning that the complexity of banks is reflected in the category of BUKU 1 banks has the same level of fraud as BUKU II and III banks.


Keywords


complexity; fraud, Islamic corporate governance; sharia banking

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.33258/birci.v4i4.3394

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.