Block-holders and Monitoring Mechanisms in Nigeria

Companies continue to fold up after the global economic melt-down of 2008 starting with the Enron saga.One of the reasons offered by practitioners and intellectuals in their search for the cause and solution to the problem is information asymmetry between the managements and the shareholders.It is e...

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Main Authors: Arowolo, Oluyemisi Rachael, Che Ahmad, Ayoib
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UKM Press 2017
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Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/23587/1/AJAG%208%202017%2071%2078.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/23587/
http://doi.org/10.17576/AJAG-2017-08-06
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spelling my.uum.repo.235872018-03-15T01:30:39Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/23587/ Block-holders and Monitoring Mechanisms in Nigeria Arowolo, Oluyemisi Rachael Che Ahmad, Ayoib HF5601 Accounting Companies continue to fold up after the global economic melt-down of 2008 starting with the Enron saga.One of the reasons offered by practitioners and intellectuals in their search for the cause and solution to the problem is information asymmetry between the managements and the shareholders.It is extremely necessary ever since the sagas and continuous business failures and financial distress in Nigeria, in particular, to focus on monitoring mechanisms (MM), especially in Sub-Saharan countries.In addition, it is essential to understand the factors relating to MM as it cannot work in isolation.The purpose of this study is therefore to examine the extent to which block-holders impact on MM using the annual reports of 111 Nigerian non-financial listed companies in the context of agency theory.In addition, data were collected from the companies in respect of their internal auditing using the questionnaire as these are not available in the annual reports.The findings provide evidence that the block-holders significantly relate to monitoring mechanisms. Thus, this paper provides a new knowledge regarding monitoring mechanisms and its antecedents (directorship, internal and external auditing).These findings are with policy implications for the board of directors to implement their monitoring responsibilities.The findings also suggest policy implications for the internal and external auditors.The findings are useful for further review of corporate governance guidelines by the regulatory agencies and government.The paper contributes to knowledge in Sub-Saharan Africa, Nigeria in particular by examining block-holders in relation to the aggregate cost of monitoring mechanisms (directorship, internal and external auditing). UKM Press 2017 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://repo.uum.edu.my/23587/1/AJAG%208%202017%2071%2078.pdf Arowolo, Oluyemisi Rachael and Che Ahmad, Ayoib (2017) Block-holders and Monitoring Mechanisms in Nigeria. Asian Journal of Accounting and Governance, 8. pp. 71-78. ISSN 21803838 http://doi.org/10.17576/AJAG-2017-08-06 doi:10.17576/AJAG-2017-08-06
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Institutionali Repository
url_provider http://repo.uum.edu.my/
language English
topic HF5601 Accounting
spellingShingle HF5601 Accounting
Arowolo, Oluyemisi Rachael
Che Ahmad, Ayoib
Block-holders and Monitoring Mechanisms in Nigeria
description Companies continue to fold up after the global economic melt-down of 2008 starting with the Enron saga.One of the reasons offered by practitioners and intellectuals in their search for the cause and solution to the problem is information asymmetry between the managements and the shareholders.It is extremely necessary ever since the sagas and continuous business failures and financial distress in Nigeria, in particular, to focus on monitoring mechanisms (MM), especially in Sub-Saharan countries.In addition, it is essential to understand the factors relating to MM as it cannot work in isolation.The purpose of this study is therefore to examine the extent to which block-holders impact on MM using the annual reports of 111 Nigerian non-financial listed companies in the context of agency theory.In addition, data were collected from the companies in respect of their internal auditing using the questionnaire as these are not available in the annual reports.The findings provide evidence that the block-holders significantly relate to monitoring mechanisms. Thus, this paper provides a new knowledge regarding monitoring mechanisms and its antecedents (directorship, internal and external auditing).These findings are with policy implications for the board of directors to implement their monitoring responsibilities.The findings also suggest policy implications for the internal and external auditors.The findings are useful for further review of corporate governance guidelines by the regulatory agencies and government.The paper contributes to knowledge in Sub-Saharan Africa, Nigeria in particular by examining block-holders in relation to the aggregate cost of monitoring mechanisms (directorship, internal and external auditing).
format Article
author Arowolo, Oluyemisi Rachael
Che Ahmad, Ayoib
author_facet Arowolo, Oluyemisi Rachael
Che Ahmad, Ayoib
author_sort Arowolo, Oluyemisi Rachael
title Block-holders and Monitoring Mechanisms in Nigeria
title_short Block-holders and Monitoring Mechanisms in Nigeria
title_full Block-holders and Monitoring Mechanisms in Nigeria
title_fullStr Block-holders and Monitoring Mechanisms in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Block-holders and Monitoring Mechanisms in Nigeria
title_sort block-holders and monitoring mechanisms in nigeria
publisher UKM Press
publishDate 2017
url http://repo.uum.edu.my/23587/1/AJAG%208%202017%2071%2078.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/23587/
http://doi.org/10.17576/AJAG-2017-08-06
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score 13.209306