Significance of the Study to the Field of Leadership13
Nature of the Study13
Research Question18
Agency Theory20
Differential Association Theory21
Chapter Two: Literature Review25
Case Study of a Firm Implementing ABC25
Purpose of the Case Study26
Figure 1: Operations Hexagon27
Activity-Based Costing and Management27
Figure 2: Activity-Based Costing/Management Information System33
ABC/M Systems and its Impact on Operations Function34
Product Planning and Design35
Quality Management and Control37
Process Design and Improvement40
Inventory and Procurement Management42
Capacity and Investment Management44
Work Force Management47
Empowerment and Accountability47
Roles and Responsibilities48
Performance Measures48
Theories of Activity Based Costing and Maximisation of Profits51
Accounting Standards51
Current Findings55
Corporate Fraud57
Detection Methods64
Prevention Techniques69
Fraudulent Financial Reporting71
Chapter Three: Methodology and Research Design76
Research Design77
Research Questions82
Population83
Sampling Frame85
Chapter Four: Results and Findings88
Chapter Five: Conclusion92
References97
Chapter One: Introduction
Introduction
Corporate fraud is the number one financial crime out of the eight categories of fraud investigated by the Financial Crimes Section of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) (U.S. Department of Justice, 2005). As defined by the FBI, "Fraud-the art of deliberate deception for unlawful gain-is as old as history" (Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2005, ¶ 1). In 2002, several high-profile financial frauds involving Enron, WorldCom, Adelphia, Tyco, and Global Crossings started debates within academia on the conceptual framework of financial transparency (Kuizick, 2004).
The purpose of this qualitative phenomenological study using a modified van Kaam method by Moustakas (1994) with semi-structured, recorded, transcribed interviews was to explore the perceptions of a purposive sample of 20 certified public accountants, forensic accountants, and criminal fraud investigators in the Denver, Colorado area on how to mitigate corporate financial fraud. This introduction contains background information on the phenomenon of financial fraud as a growing economic concern in the United States. The findings of this study might uncover changes needed to mitigate corporate fraud with new knowledge for leadership to adopt relative to criminal fraud, and may help restore investor confidence in the financial markets. Background of the problem and how the design and methodology selected best responds to the research questions, a discussion on the theoretical framework, key definitions used, assumptions made, limitations inherent in the study, and delimitations of the data are provided in chapter 1.
Background of the Problem
The phenomenon of fraud is not new. The founder of the Association of Certified
Fraud Examiners and former FBI investigator explained that fraud is a social phenomenon (Wells, ...