dc.description.abstract |
Sound corporate governance is very critical in improving the financial performance of
any organization. Adoption of corporate governance by SACCOs is the commitment
to properly manage it while promising to pay back a reasonable return on money
invested. SACCOS are facing myriad of challenges which have created inefficiency
and lack of competitiveness hence impair their financial performance and this has
necessitated the need for this study to fill the knowledge gap in the existing literature.
This study sought to establish the moderating effect of firm size on the relationship
between corporate governance and financial performance of regulated SACCOs in
South Rift Region, Kenya. The study specifically sought to; examine the moderating
effect of firm size on the relationship between board composition and financial
performance; determine the moderating effect of firm size on the relationship between
audit committee characteristics and the financial performance; evaluate the
moderating effect of firm size on the relationship between transparency and financial
performance; analyse the moderating effect of firm size on the relationship between
relationship between risk management and financial performance; establish the
moderating effect of firm size on the relationship between corporate governance and
financial performance of regulated SACCOs in South Rift Region, Kenya. The study
was anchored on agency theory, stakeholder theory and signalling theory. A mixed
research design which combined both the elements of quantitative research and
qualitative research was adopted for this study. All the 18 SASRA regulated SACCOs
in south rift region form the target population. Primary data collected using structured
questionnaire where the respondents were the Chief Executive Officers, Board
Members, Chief Finance Officers and Chairperson of audit committee. The study did
census of all 18 SASRA regulated SACCOs in South Rift Region since the population
was small where 216 respondents were purposely selected and were 18 Chief
Executive Officers, 162 Board Members, 18 Chief Finance Managers and 18
chairpersons of Audit Committee. The validity of research instrument was achieved
through expert review while the a reliability of research instrument was tested using
Cronbach Alpha which yielded a coefficient of 0.841. Data collection used structured
questionnaire where descriptive statistics was used to provide mean and standard
deviation. Multiple regression as inferential statistics was used for testing the
hypothesis. The data are presented using tables and charts. The study found that there
was strong, positive and significant relationship between firm size on corporate
governance and financial performance where the strongest correlation was established
between financial performance and transparency (r=0.905; p<0.05); followed by risk
management (r=0.864; p <0.05); audit committee characteristics (r=0.792; p <0.05);
board composition (r=0.728; p <0.05); and firm size (r=0.381; p <0.05). The findings
showed that the R square before introducing a moderating variable was 84.0% and
this changed to 84.2% after the introduction of firm size which implies that firm size
positively and significantly moderated the relationship between corporate governance
practises and financial performance by 0.02%. The findings may also form basis for
further research as well as add to the pool of literature on corporate governance and
financial performance. |
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