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Journal of Accounting and Investment
ISSN : 26223899     EISSN : 26226413     DOI : 10.18196/jai
Core Subject : Economy,
JAI receives rigorous articles that have not been offered for publication elsewhere. JAI focuses on the issue related to accounting and investments that are relevant for the development of theory and practices of accounting in Indonesia and southeast asia especially. Therefore, JAI accepts the articles from Indonesia authors and other countries. JAI covered various of research approach, namely: quantitative, qualitative and mixed method.
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Articles 4 Documents
Search results for , issue "Vol 25, No 3: September 2024" : 4 Documents clear
Investigating the influence of monetary policy on the balance sheet performance of commercial banks Kalua, Denis; Lipunga, Andrew Munthopa; Banda, Fredrick
Journal of Accounting and Investment Vol 25, No 3: September 2024
Publisher : Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta, Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.18196/jai.v25i3.21052

Abstract

Research aims: The study investigates the influence of monetary policy on the balance sheet performance of commercial banks in Malawi.Design/Methodology/Approach: The study employed an explanatory research design using time series data obtained from financial reports of commercial banks and economic reports published by the Reserve Bank of Malawi from 2012 to 2022. Regression analyses were conducted to establish the influence of monetary policy on balance sheet performance (loan and overdraft growth).Research findings: The results suggest that the monetary policy instruments, namely, the liquidity reserve requirement (LRR), Lombard rate, policy rate, and open market operations, have insignificant influence on the loan and overdraft growth in commercial banks in Malawi.Theoretical contribution/Originality: This implies that these monetary policy tools are not the exterior determinants of the balance sheet performance of commercial banks in Malawi.Research limitation: The study used a single measure of the balance sheet performance of commercial banks.
Macroeconomic determinants of responsible investments’ performance under different market conditions: Evidence from South Africa Moodley, Fabian; Lawrence, Babatunde; Kunjal, Damien
Journal of Accounting and Investment Vol 25, No 3: September 2024
Publisher : Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta, Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.18196/jai.v25i3.21616

Abstract

Research aims: The study examines the effect of macroeconomic variables on JSE responsible investments returns under changing market conditions.Design/Methodology/Approach: The study implemented a sample period comprising monthly data for the period 2015/11 to 2023/03. The dependent variable of the study comprised of JSE responsible investing indices whereas the independent variables consisted of macroeconomic variables. The study also implemented a two-state Markov regime-switching model to cater to the asymmetrical effect between the dependent and independent variable.Research findings: The JSE responsible investment index returns were found to be significantly positively affected by short-term interest growth rates in a bull regime and significantly negatively in a bear regime. The JSE responsible investment top 30 index returns were significantly negatively affected by the money supply growth rate in a bull regime but not in a bear regime. Moreover, the JSE responsible investment index returns contained alternating efficiencies. Theoretical contribution/Originality: The study is the first to consider the effect of macroeconomic variables on the performance of responsible investments under different market conditions in South Africa. Consequently, the study sheds light on responsible investing in emerging markets where research is limited.Practitioner/Policy implication: Portfolio rebalancing is necessary when equity markets are bullish or bearish. Moreover, policymakers should reconsider market regulations, such that the equity market is adaptive and not efficient. Research limitation/Implication: The study focused on six macroeconomic variables, where this does not affect the robustness of the study. More macroeconomic variables can be used in future research.
Testing the audit quality of female audit partners: Empirical findings from Thailand Hadisurja, Andrea Chrysanti; Herusetya, Antonius; Purba, Golrida Karyawati
Journal of Accounting and Investment Vol 25, No 3: September 2024
Publisher : Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta, Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.18196/jai.v25i3.21413

Abstract

Research aims: The annual increase in the number of female auditors in partner positions has been particularly pronounced in Southeast Asian countries, with Thailand being a notable example. This study, thus, investigates the quality of female audit partners compared to male audit partners in terms of how clients manage earnings.Design/Methodology/Approach: The researchers hand-collected gender data of audit partners from the audit reports of all listed firms on the Stock Exchange of Thailand and obtained 424 firm-year observations. The researchers applied two models to test the hypotheses, using cross-sectional time-series OLS and logistic regression data analyses. The researchers also performed additional analyses and robustness checks to support the main tests.Research findings: The study revealed no substantial disparity in the female and male auditors’ quality at the partner levels, as measured by accrual earnings management and earnings distribution approaches. The findings indicate that female and male audit partners have similar audit quality in preventing earnings management and earnings benchmark likelihood. The study adds to the existing research in East (Southeast) Asia, showing that female partners in these countries have audit quality that is at least comparable to male partners.Theoretical contribution/Originality: The researchers extend prior studies on the behavior distinction in audit quality of the auditor gender at the partner level, which is under-researched in Southeast Asia.Practitioner/Policy implication: The study has important implications for stakeholders and standard-setters to keep strengthening female leadership in the auditing industry and promoting higher gender parity in the growing industry of the future.
Intellectual capital on organizational performance through the mediation of intrinsic motivation in Indonesian universities Nurazizah, Siti Fadhillah; Irawan, Dwi; Juanda, Ahmad; Nuha, Sukma Uli
Journal of Accounting and Investment Vol 25, No 3: September 2024
Publisher : Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta, Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.18196/jai.v25i3.23009

Abstract

Research aims: This research examines how intellectual capital affects organizational performance in Indonesian universities, focusing on the mediating role of intrinsic motivation. It highlights the importance of intrinsic motivation in enhancing the influence of human capital, structural capital, and relational capital in improving organizational effectiveness.Design/Methodology/Approach: This quantitative study used survey data from 123 employees at top-ranked Indonesian universities by webometrics, selected via simple random sampling. The data were analyzed using variance-based structural equation modeling (SEM) with a Partial Least Squares (PLS) approach.Research findings: The findings of this study revealed a significant positive relationship between intellectual capital and organizational performance in Indonesian universities after being fully mediated by intrinsic motivation.Theoretical contribution/Originality: The novelty of this research exhibits how intrinsic motivation from well-organized Self Determination Theory (SDT) can mediate the influence of intellectual capital on organizational performance in higher education. The results of this study provide valuable insights for increasing intrinsic motivation in strengthening intellectual capital.Practitioner/Policy implication: This study's findings suggest that Indonesian university management and policymakers should focus on optimizing intellectual capital by fostering intrinsic motivation to enhance organizational performance.Research limitation/Implication: The limitation of this research is that there are no differences between private and state universities in examining the effect of intrinsic capital on organizational performance. It also only considers intrinsic motivation, ignoring extrinsic motivation. Future research should include extrinsic motivation and explore other intellectual capital indicators for a comprehensive understanding of organizational performance in Indonesian higher education.

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