Abstract
Financial shenanigans are moves made by a company's management with the intention of falsifying the company's financial status and stated performance. The goal of this study is to clarify if financial considerations and company size have an impact on a company's propensity to engage in financial misdeeds in Indonesian public companies. Financial leverage, financial stability, personal financial need, and return on assets are the financial characteristics that were examined in this study. An Indonesian firm that has gone public serves as the study's sample. Purposive sampling was used in this study's sampling. This study's analysis method makes use of multiple linear regression. The findings revealed that the company was unaffected by all variables except for financial leverage.
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More From: International Conference of Business and Social Sciences
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