Jurnal Akuntansi & Auditing Indonesia
JURNAL AKUNTANSI & AUDITING INDONESIA (JAAI) is published by Accounting Department, Faculty of Economics, Islamic University of Indonesia and Supported by IAI-KAPd (Ikatan Akuntan Indonesia - Kompartemen Akuntan Pendidik). Published twice a year on June and December, JAAI is a media of communication and reply forum for scientific works especially concerning the field of the accounting and auditing studies of developing countries. Papers presented in JAAI are solely author's responsibility. The editorial board may edit without changing the substance of the papers.
Articles
397 Documents
The importance of liquidity to improve the quality earnings of company
Teguh Erawati;
Hadri Kusuma;
Titi Swantari;
Reni Listyawati
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing Indonesia Vol 27, No 2 (2023)
Publisher : Accounting Department, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia
Show Abstract
|
Download Original
|
Original Source
|
Check in Google Scholar
|
DOI: 10.20885/jaai.vol27.iss2.art3
This research aims to examine the relationship of Profitability, Liquidity, and Investment Opportunity Set on Earnings Quality with Good Corporate Governance as its Moderating Variable from some manufacturing companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange during the 2017-2021 period. The sampling technique employed in this study is purposive sampling method by observing a total of 57 manufacturing companies, so that the total samples were 285 data. The results of this study indicate that the profitability variable has no positive effect on earnings quality; the liquidity variable has a positive effect on earnings quality; and the IOS variable has no negative effect on earnings quality. In addition, the Good Corporate Governance (GCG) variable is unable to moderate the profitability variable on earnings quality. The GCG variable is also unable to moderate the liquidity variable on earnings quality. However, the GCG variable is able to moderate the IOS variable on earnings quality.
Adoption of a combined assurance framework in South Africa’s provincial government departments: A compliance case study
Dubihlela, Jobo;
Solomon, Henoacia
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing Indonesia Vol 27, No 2 (2023)
Publisher : Accounting Department, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia
Show Abstract
|
Download Original
|
Original Source
|
Check in Google Scholar
|
DOI: 10.20885/jaai.vol27.iss2.art7
This paper examines the role of compliance units in the adoption of a combined assurance framework within provincial government departments in the Western Cape. It strives to avoid risks being managed in silos and ensure risks are efficiently managed collaboratively. A combined assurance framework provides a coordinated approach to all assurance activities. It aims to optimise the assurance coverage obtained from management and internal and external assurance providers on the risk areas affecting an organisation. Compliance is an independent function that supervises and participates in placing internal procedures in conformity with regulations within the context of the integrity policy covering fields such as corporate governance and fields possibly required by respective Boards of Directors, taking account of risks in various activities. This study followed a qualitative approach, and data was collected by interviewing various officials within the provincial government departments. A sample of 10 respondents ranging from CAEs, Internal Auditors, and Directors was selected to participate in the face-to-face semi-structured interviews. The study aimed to conclude that a combined assurance framework undeniably incorporates the efforts of management and external and internal assurance providers. It builds their alliance and develops a combined and more holistic breakdown of the organisation's risk profile. The general view is that the assurance gap is significant. However, the combined assurance framework will furnish a clear process and criteria for recognising each department's assurance gap and degree of risk coverage.
Carbon tax: A bibliometric analysis for future research in Indonesia
Sulistiyanti, Umi;
Falikhatun, Falikhatun
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing Indonesia Vol 27, No 2 (2023)
Publisher : Accounting Department, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia
Show Abstract
|
Download Original
|
Original Source
|
Check in Google Scholar
|
DOI: 10.20885/jaai.vol27.iss2.art8
This study aims to conduct a literature review of previous studies on carbon tax and explore the essential features for future research directions in carbon tax. This research is analyzed by a bibliometric method using VOS Viewer and R Studio. The Scopus database from 2013 to 2023 was explored to scrutinize the co-occurrence and co-authorship of 769 research articles. The results show that the most significant increase in the research publications on carbon tax occurred in 2022. This increase is due to the rise in the number of publications on carbon tax in developed countries, namely China, the United States, and the United Kingdom, as well as important events such as the Paris Agreement and Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This study provides potential directions for future carbon tax research in developing countries, especially Indonesia, which will implement a carbon tax in 2025. This study has a limitation in that it only focuses on English-language articles published in the Scopus database due to their quality and support from the previous literature reviews.
How do board characteristics influence the ESG disclosure in Indonesia?
Sari, Tiyas Kurnia;
Nadhira Fitriani
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing Indonesia Vol 27, No 2 (2023)
Publisher : Accounting Department, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia
Show Abstract
|
Download Original
|
Original Source
|
Check in Google Scholar
|
DOI: 10.20885/jaai.vol27.iss2.art9
Our study investigates the influence of board characteristics on ESG disclosure for companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange listed from to 2018-2022. This study analyzes independent board members, board size, gender diversity, and audit committee independence as determinants of ESG disclosure in Indonesia’s public companies. The data were derived from Thompson Reuters and multiple linear regression was used to test the effects. The results showed that gender diversity was the only factor that was not significant. Independent commissionaires and board size positively affect ESG disclosure. Meanwhile, audit committee independence negatively and significantly affects ESG disclosure. Although ESG disclosure practices are still uncommon in Indonesia, the importance of board characteristics can be determined based on the results.
Fraud threats: How organization improves the anti-fraud team quality?
Fajri, Kharisma Fatmalina;
Hendi Yogi Prabowo
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing Indonesia Vol 28, No 1 (2024)
Publisher : Accounting Department, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia
Show Abstract
|
Download Original
|
Original Source
|
Check in Google Scholar
|
DOI: 10.20885/jaai.vol28.iss1.art10
This study aims to discover how the Indonesian Local Government Rural Bank improves the quality of the anti-fraud team to prevent and detect fraud based on a mechanism of the anti-fraud strategy issued by Bank Indonesia. A qualitative analysis approach was applied 12 semi-structured interviews with the anti-fraud team and related officers. The content analysis approach supported by NVivo software and has discovered several required competencies and competencies already developed by the organization’s anti-fraud team for fraud prevention and detection. This study provides a detailed discussion of how these competencies are used in the anti-fraud mechanism by identifying the gaps between the required competencies and developed competencies to give recommendations for the organization to enhance the quality of the anti-fraud team in conducting fraud prevention and detection.
Determinants of audit quality during the Covid-19 pandemic
Puspaningsih, Abriyani;
Larasati, Irena Safira
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing Indonesia Vol 28, No 2 (2024)
Publisher : Accounting Department, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia
Show Abstract
|
Download Original
|
Original Source
|
Check in Google Scholar
|
DOI: 10.20885/jaai.vol28.iss2.art3
This study aims to determine the effect of audit risk, time budget pressure, auditor motivation, audit complexity, and professional skepticism on audit quality during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study population was public accountants who worked at public accounting firms and had performed auditing. A purposive sampling technique was used to select a sample of 55 participants. Data were collected using a questionnaire that had been tested for validity and reliability. Multiple regression was used to analyze the data. The results of this study indicated that audit risk, time budget pressure, and audit complexity had negative effects on audit quality. Meanwhile, auditor motivation and professional skepticism were shown to have positive effects on audit quality. The findings of this research suggest that audit risk, time budget pressure, and audit complexity should be minimized to maximize audit quality. Meanwhile, auditor motivation and professional skepticism should be maximized to achieve audit quality.
Corporate governance structure, firm characteristics and voluntary disclosure: The case of Indonesian sharia compliant companies
Nugraheni, Peni;
Muhammad Eko, Rahardianto;
Aziz, Nor Izzati Mohd
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing Indonesia Vol 28, No 2 (2024)
Publisher : Accounting Department, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia
Show Abstract
|
Download Original
|
Original Source
|
Check in Google Scholar
|
DOI: 10.20885/jaai.vol28.iss2.art2
The study aims to examine the influence of corporate governance structure that includes ownership structure, board of directors’ size, board of commissioner’s size, and audit firm type to the Islamic voluntary disclosure (IVD) in the Indonesian sharia-compliant companies listed on Jakarta Islamic Index 70 (JII70). Voluntary disclosure in this study is measured using the Islamic disclosure index. This study analyses the data using multiple regression. The results show that the board of directors’ size significantly positively affects Islamic voluntary disclosure, while the ownership structure, type of audit firm and board of commissioners' size do not significantly affect the extent of Islamic voluntary disclosure. These results imply that voluntary disclosure is very dependent on the will of internal parties. The board of directors can encourage wider disclosure, especially in sharia aspects, thereby further emphasizing its status as a sharia compliance company.
Intellectual capital disclosure in public university and the determinants
Mawa, Afifah;
Doddy Setiawan
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing Indonesia Vol 28, No 2 (2024)
Publisher : Accounting Department, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia
Show Abstract
|
Download Original
|
Original Source
|
Check in Google Scholar
|
DOI: 10.20885/jaai.vol28.iss2.art1
The factors influencing Intellectual Capital Disclosure (ICD) are presented on the official websites of public universities in Indonesia. This study sought to examine ICD across 48 universities classified as PTN-BH and PTN-BLU, employing multiple linear regression analysis. The findings revealed that university internationalization, location, and complexity positively and significantly impacted ICD, whereas the presence of female rectors had no discernible effect. Furthermore, a T-test analysis indicated a significant disparity in ICD between public universities situated in Java and those outside Java. Concerning the limitation of the research, the sample used could be developed by adding other types of universities. In this context, the results described the condition of universities and future research could analyze ICD through other mass media since the analysis is not limited to the official website.
Are masculine-faced CEOs linked to higher stock price risks? Evidence from Indonesia
Soeprajitno, Raden Roro Widya Ningtyas;
Rahayu Putri Agustina;
Izzul Islam Noor Mustain;
Indra Wijaya Kusuma
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing Indonesia Vol 28, No 2 (2024)
Publisher : Accounting Department, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia
Show Abstract
|
Download Original
|
Original Source
|
Check in Google Scholar
|
DOI: 10.20885/jaai.vol28.iss2.art5
This study examines whether masculine-faced CEOs are associated with a higher stock price crash risk. Using the purposive sampling method, we collected 2,969 samples from companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange from 2010 to 2019. We use the least square regression test with the robust Coarsened Exact Matching (CEM) approach to overcome sensitivity to behavioral bias. We found that CEOs with masculine faces are at higher risk of causing falling stock prices and are proven to be robust. Furthermore, only male CEOs with masculine faces were associated with falling stock prices; not female CEOs. Our findings are the first in Indonesia, complementing the development of the literature on individual characteristics by identifying CEOs with masculine faces as personality and characteristic shapers of falling stock prices. Although this study is limited to measuring facial features, which are part of an individual’s gene characteristics, it also provides stakeholders with insights into the importance of considering facial structure when evaluating CEO decision-making.
The moderating role of autonomy in the relationship between advisory services, risk management, and integrity system: Indonesia evidence
Sihombing, Ranto Partomuan;
Murniati, Monica Palupi
Jurnal Akuntansi dan Auditing Indonesia Vol 28, No 2 (2024)
Publisher : Accounting Department, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universitas Islam Indonesia
Show Abstract
|
Download Original
|
Original Source
|
Check in Google Scholar
|
DOI: 10.20885/jaai.vol28.iss2.art4
Since 2014, Indonesia has implemented the Integrity System (IS) policy across ministry and government institution work units to address the ongoing challenge of corruption. Inspectorate auditors play a pivotal role in ensuring the successful implementation of the IS, providing both advisory services and risk management support within these units. This study aims to investigate the moderating role of autonomy in the relationship between advisory services, risk management, and the integrity system. A survey of 103 inspectorate auditors from various ministries and government institutions in Indonesia was conducted to explore these dynamics. Drawing on role theory, our findings reveal two key insights: (1) advisory services and risk management significantly enhance the implementation of the IS, and (2) autonomy strengthens the positive relationship between risk management and the IS. This research addresses the underexplored debate on the primary roles of internal auditors, offering novel insights within the Indonesian context.