The Effect of Audit Standards on Fraud Detection in Enterprises Operating in Some Selected Regions of Cameroon

Authors

  • Nkum Oliver Kum The University of Bamenda
  • Dr. Tayong Desmond Mimba The University of Bamenda
  • Prof. Dobdinga Cletus Fonchamnyo The University of Bamenda

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47941/jacc.3776

Keywords:

Audit Standards, Fraud Detection, Audit Quality, Agency Theory, OHADA, Cameroon

Abstract

Purpose: This study examines the effect of auditing standards on fraud detection within enterprises in the Littoral, Centre, and West regions of Cameroon. Despite the adoption of the Revised OHADA Uniform Act and International Standards on Auditing (ISA), financial irregularities persist, creating a significant audit expectation gap.

Methodology: Adopting a quantitative research design, data were collected via structured questionnaires from 146 professional respondents, including accountants and internal controllers, using a proportional stratified sampling technique. The study utilized a multiple linear regression model to examine the effect of audit standard components on fraud detection outcome. 

Findings: The findings reveal that audit standards have a positive and statistically significant impact on fraud detection, explaining approximately 52% of the variation in detection outcomes. Specifically, dimensions such as the Audit Execution System encompassing planning, risk assessment, and procedures showed the strongest predictive power for identifying irregularities. Comparative analysis further indicates that these effects are more consistent in enterprises audited by the Big Four firms. The results underscore that while formal standards provide a necessary framework, effective fraud detection is heavily contingent upon the rigor of application and professional scepticism.

Unique Contribution to Theory, Policy and Practice: The study recommends that Cameroonian auditors transition from "checklist compliance" toward a risk-based approach as mandated by ISA 315 and suggests that regulatory bodies like ONECCA enforce mandatory quality assurance for non-Big Four firms to bridge existing methodological gaps.  This study contribute to breach the literature gap in the study of audit standards in relation to fraud detection in Cameroon. Furthermore, it determines that compliance with audit standards improve fraud detection in Cameroon.

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Author Biographies

Nkum Oliver Kum, The University of Bamenda

Faculty of economics and Management Sciences

Dr. Tayong Desmond Mimba, The University of Bamenda

Faculty of economics and Management Sciences

Prof. Dobdinga Cletus Fonchamnyo, The University of Bamenda

Faculty of economics and Management Sciences

References

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Published

2026-06-06

How to Cite

Kum, N. O., Mimba, T. D., & Fonchamnyo, D. C. (2026). The Effect of Audit Standards on Fraud Detection in Enterprises Operating in Some Selected Regions of Cameroon. Journal of Accounting, 8(1), 26–43. https://doi.org/10.47941/jacc.3776

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Articles