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Applying Benford's law to detect accounting data manipulation in the pre- and post-financial engineering periods. / Harb, Etienne ; Nasrallah, Nohade ; El Khoury, Rim et al.
In: Journal of Applied Accounting Research, 14.07.2023.

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Harb E, Nasrallah N, El Khoury R, Hussainey K. Applying Benford's law to detect accounting data manipulation in the pre- and post-financial engineering periods. Journal of Applied Accounting Research. 2023 Jul 14. Epub 2023 Jan 9. doi: 10.1108/JAAR-05-2022-0097

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Harb, Etienne ; Nasrallah, Nohade ; El Khoury, Rim et al. / Applying Benford's law to detect accounting data manipulation in the pre- and post-financial engineering periods. In: Journal of Applied Accounting Research. 2023.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Applying Benford's law to detect accounting data manipulation in the pre- and post-financial engineering periods

AU - Harb, Etienne

AU - Nasrallah, Nohade

AU - El Khoury, Rim

AU - Hussainey, Khaled

PY - 2023/7/14

Y1 - 2023/7/14

N2 - PurposeLebanon has faced one of the most severe financial and economic crises since the end of 2019. The practices of the Lebanese banks are blamed for dangerously exposing economic agents and precipitating the current financial collapse. This paper examines the patterns of manipulation of the 10 biggest banks before and after implementing the financial engineering mechanism.Design/methodology/approachThe authors apply Benford law for the first and second positions of the reports of condition and income and four out of the six aspects of the CAMELS rating system (Capital Adequacy, Assets Quality, Management expertise, Earnings Strength, Liquidity and Sensitivity to the market) by excluding Management and Sensitivity. The deviations from BL frequencies are tested using Z-statistic and Chi-square tests.FindingsBanks seem to have manipulated their Capital Adequacy, Liquidity and Assets Quality in the pre-financial engineering and considerably in the post-financial engineering periods. Fraudulent manipulations in the banking sector can distort depositors, shareholders and regulating authorities.Research limitations/implicationsThis study has many implications for governmental authorities, commercial banks, depositors, businesses, accounting and auditing firms, and policymakers. The Lebanese government needs to implement corrective fiscal and monetary policies and apply amendments to the bank secrecy and capital control law. The central bank should revamp its organizational structure, improve its disclosure practices and significantly reduce its ties to the government and the political elite.Practical implicationsThe study findings suggest that the central bank should revamp its organizational structure, improve its disclosure practices and significantly reduce its ties to the government and the political elite.Originality/valueThe study is the first to examine the patterns of fraudulent manipulation in the Lebanese banking industry using Benford Law (BL).

AB - PurposeLebanon has faced one of the most severe financial and economic crises since the end of 2019. The practices of the Lebanese banks are blamed for dangerously exposing economic agents and precipitating the current financial collapse. This paper examines the patterns of manipulation of the 10 biggest banks before and after implementing the financial engineering mechanism.Design/methodology/approachThe authors apply Benford law for the first and second positions of the reports of condition and income and four out of the six aspects of the CAMELS rating system (Capital Adequacy, Assets Quality, Management expertise, Earnings Strength, Liquidity and Sensitivity to the market) by excluding Management and Sensitivity. The deviations from BL frequencies are tested using Z-statistic and Chi-square tests.FindingsBanks seem to have manipulated their Capital Adequacy, Liquidity and Assets Quality in the pre-financial engineering and considerably in the post-financial engineering periods. Fraudulent manipulations in the banking sector can distort depositors, shareholders and regulating authorities.Research limitations/implicationsThis study has many implications for governmental authorities, commercial banks, depositors, businesses, accounting and auditing firms, and policymakers. The Lebanese government needs to implement corrective fiscal and monetary policies and apply amendments to the bank secrecy and capital control law. The central bank should revamp its organizational structure, improve its disclosure practices and significantly reduce its ties to the government and the political elite.Practical implicationsThe study findings suggest that the central bank should revamp its organizational structure, improve its disclosure practices and significantly reduce its ties to the government and the political elite.Originality/valueThe study is the first to examine the patterns of fraudulent manipulation in the Lebanese banking industry using Benford Law (BL).

U2 - 10.1108/JAAR-05-2022-0097

DO - 10.1108/JAAR-05-2022-0097

M3 - Article

JO - Journal of Applied Accounting Research

JF - Journal of Applied Accounting Research

SN - 0967-5426

ER -