“…The government should aim for prosperity and freedom from corruption for its people (Ndraha, 2007), yet the administration of state affairs is highly vulnerable to conflicts of interest (Jensen and Meckling, 1976b) that has the potential to cause information asymmetry (Fama et al, 2007), resulting in a culture of corruption that greatly impacts governance and antifraud control to eradicate corruption (Bierstaker, 2009). A good culture has a significant positive relationship with governance and the risk of fraud (Mihret, 2015;Wahab, Pitchay and Ali, 2016), associated with the presence of effective leaders. Furthermore, women leaders are capable of suppressing corruption (Lenard et al, 2017) and reducing the number of fraud (Prabowo et al, 2017) by implementing good governance and code of ethics (Law, 2011;Mensah and Zutter, 2017).…”