Abstract:
ABSTRACT
There are one hundred and forty-four Rural and community banks serving in 
all the districts in Ghana with a large and diverse stakeholder community. 
With the challenges that were brought about by the financial sector crisis 
followed by the myriad of reforms in the financial sector, it has become 
relevant to assess the readiness of all financial institutions for any further stir 
in the system. This study focuses its attention on the rural and community 
banking industry in Ghana. The study seeks to examine the corporate 
governance factors that determine the financial accountability of rural and 
community banks using regression analysis. Financial accountability was 
measured using quality index, transparency and disclosure score and 
compliance index. Corporate governance on the other hand took into 
consideration three dimensions namely board characteristics, external audit 
quality and Audit committees. These three dimensions have been recognised 
in prior literature as the most used determinants of corporate governance. The 
findings reveal that board independence, board structure, external audit fees, 
audit committee existence and audit committee expertise have a significant 
effect on financial accountability. The study therefore recommends that the 
rural and community banks should strive for independence of their boards, 
structure the leadership of the board in ways that allow for innovation and 
continuity, establish audit committees among others. This will be the way to 
go if rural and community banks should avert any crisis in the future and 
ensure continues survival.