The role of audit committees in the Libyan banking sector as it transforms into an Islamic system

Joint Authors

Masili, Abd al-Hakim M.
Harradined, Donald

Source

International Journal of Islamic Economics and Finance Studies

Issue

Vol. 5, Issue 2 (31 Jul. 2019), pp.1-22, 22 p.

Publisher

Centre of Political Economical and Social Research

Publication Date

2019-07-31

Country of Publication

Turkey

No. of Pages

22

Main Subjects

Economy and Commerce
Financial and Accounting Sciences
Islamic Studies

Topics

Abstract EN

This paper aims to explore the role of audit committees (ACs) in the Libyan banking sector (LBS) and to investigate the impact on AC practice of the sector’s recent shift to an Islamic banking system.

Little is known about the role of these committees, which were only made compulsory in Libya in 2010.

The findings support agency theory in that they perceived these committees as being responsible for reviewing financial statements, the internal auditing function and the external audit process.

However, the perception was that ACs are not currently carrying out these responsibilities effectively; participants perceived ACs as spending too little time reviewing financial statements, rarely challenging weaknesses in the work of internal auditors and seldom following up or supervising the work of external auditors.

One explanation for this state of affairs is that ACs in the LBS are primarily designed to create legitimacy outside the organisation rather than to effect radical change within it.

The study also found that it is not the application of Islamic law per se that is perceived as having an adverse impact on AC practice in the LBS, but the speed at which this transition is taking place in an already weak banking environment.

This research helps expand our knowledge of current AC practice as a key mechanism of corporate governance (CG) by being the first to investigate how this role is performed in Libyan banks, which are in the early stages of implementing Islamic law.

The research is also important because it addresses an information gap in the accounting literature by investigating AC effectiveness in a developing country, a context which is still poorly understood.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Masili, Abd al-Hakim M.& Mangenac, Musa& Harradined, Donald. 2019. The role of audit committees in the Libyan banking sector as it transforms into an Islamic system. International Journal of Islamic Economics and Finance Studies،Vol. 5, no. 2, pp.1-22.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-890596

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Mangenac, Musa…[et al.]. The role of audit committees in the Libyan banking sector as it transforms into an Islamic system. International Journal of Islamic Economics and Finance Studies Vol. 5, no. 2 (Jul. 2019), pp.1-22.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-890596

American Medical Association (AMA)

Masili, Abd al-Hakim M.& Mangenac, Musa& Harradined, Donald. The role of audit committees in the Libyan banking sector as it transforms into an Islamic system. International Journal of Islamic Economics and Finance Studies. 2019. Vol. 5, no. 2, pp.1-22.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-890596

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 18-22

Record ID

BIM-890596