Checking Distress In The Nigerian Banking Sector The Role Of Accountants And Auditors

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CHECKING DISTRESS IN THE NIGERIAN BANKING SECTOR THE ROLE OF ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS

(A CASE STUDY OF FIRST BANK OF NIGERIA PLC, AWKA) 

PROPOSAL

 

          The objective of this research work is to check the distress in the banking sectors, the duty of the accountants and auditors to make sure that it does not occur.

          The method of research used is both primary and secondary that is, the primary method will be in-form of interviews and administration of questionnaires while secondary will be using literature etc.

          The limitation to be faced while carrying out this project is lack of money, time and data constrain.

          At the end of the research I believed that there will be a way to solve this issue of distress in the banking sectors

 

 

 

 

 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

Approval page

Dedication

Acknowledgement

Proposal

Table of contents

 

CHAPTER ONE

1.0     Background to the study

1.1            Introduction

1.2            Statement of problem

1.3            Objectives of the study

1.4            Significance of the study

1.5            Scope of the study

1.6            Limitation of the study

1.7            Definition of term

1.8            Statement of hypothesis

CHAPTER TWO

2.0            Literature review

2.1     Introduction

2.2            Distress in the Nigerian banking sector

2.3            Emergence of distress banks in Nigeria

2.4            Implication of distress for the economy

2.5            Causes of bank distress in Nigeria

2.6            Who is an auditor

2.7            What is auditing

2.8            The role of auditor in distress and failed banks

2.9            The role of auditing/function of the external auditor

2.10       The duties of the accounting/auditor

2.11       Auditor liability in relation to distressed and failed bank

2.12       Letter to the management

 

CHAPTER THREE

3.0            Research methodology

3.1     Area of study

1.2            Research design

1.3            Source of data and information

1.4            Mode of data collection analysis

1.5            Analysis of data

 

CHAPTER FIVE

4.0            Presentation, analysis and interpretation of data

4.1     Data presentation

4.2            Questionnaires administration and analysis of responses

4.3            Test of hypothesis

 
CHAPTER FIVE

5.0            Summary, conclusion and recommendation

5.1     Summary

5.2            Conclusion

5.3            Recommendations

Bibliography

Appendix

CHAPTER ONE

 

BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY

1.1            INTRODUCTION

Distress in the Nigerian banking sectors is a problem that bank has in this recent time.  This seems as if the regulatory authorities appeared to be fighting a losing battle to sanitize the system.

Ebtiodaghe (1996) observed that banking distress occurs when customers were unable the loss of their deposits and consequent breakdown of their contractual obligation.  The central bank fails to meet its capitalization requirements, has a weak deposit base and is afflicted by mismanagement.  Aderiu (1997) said that distress in banks I based on the banks examination rating system with the word “CAMEL” that is C=capital adequate, A = Asset quality, Management competence, E = earning strength, L = Liquidity sufficiency.  The above mentioned is the aggregate areas that really qualifies a bank to be branded “ healthy or sick”.

A bank is considered healthy by the CBN if it maintains six criteria for instance capital paid up capital, sound management i.e bank meeting up with CBN rules, satisfy customers and shareholders interest, minimum liquidity of 30% not less than 10% of its liquid assets to be in treasury bill and certificates.  In a situation where a bank defaults in one or few of the above criteria and fails to rectify its default position within a month, it is indeed qualified to be classified as distressed.

Where banks is unable to service its fixed costs, meet it debts obligations to its stakeholders has a net cash greater than its capital and can no longer operate profitably, the bank is deemed to have failed. Thus a failed banks is a bank which is unable to meet its obligations to its stakeholders as at when due arising from weakness in its financial, operational and managerial conditions.

The failed bank decree also defined “failed bank” as a bank whose license has been taken over by the CBN.  Due to the inability of the regulatory authorities to bring back some of these distressed bank which failed eventually,  the only way left in order to sustain public confidence and stability of the system is to revoke their licensed put them on  liquidation.

Regrettably this has been the fate of some distressed banks in the country.  Almost 36 banks are on distress.

 

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