Maturity of Information Technology Governance in the Financial Sector of Ethiopia; a Comparative Study
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Date
2016-06-09
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Addis Ababa University
Abstract
Information Technology (IT) changes significantly the way we live, communicate and do
business. As a result there are few companies that can afford the luxury of ignoring IT. This
pervasive use of technology has created a critical dependency on IT that calls for a specific focus
on IT Governance.
The aim of this study was to investigate maturity of IT Governance in the financial sector of
Ethiopia. Mainly survey methodology was employed to investigate the perceived importance and
maturity of IT Governance practices in the financial sector of Ethiopia in terms of IT
Governance structure, processes and relational mechanism. Using simple random sampling, two
private banks (Dashen Bank and Zemen Bank) and two private insurance companies (National
Insurance Company of Ethiopia and Nile Insurance) were selected randomly. Purposive
sampling was used to include Commercial Bank of Ethiopia and Ethiopian Insurance Company
since one of the objectives of the research was comparing IT Governance maturity between
private and public financial institutions. A total of 96 self administered questionnaires were
distributed targeting senior business and IT leaders and return rate of 80% was achieved.
Regarding data analysis, the quantitative data was analyzed using SPSS and the qualitative data
was presented based on predefined themes. Finally the survey result was complemented and
triangulated with interview result and document review to answer the research questions.
Importance of IT Governance in the financial sector of Ethiopia was rated 4.2 based on a scale
from 0(strongly disagree) to 5(strongly agree). This shows that there is a strong consensus
between business and IT leaders on the Importance of IT Governance practices. In spite of this
keenness, the actual IT Governance maturity was rated 1.2 (level 1) based on generic maturity
scale from 0(non-existence) to 5(optimized) i.e. IT Governance issues were recognized but
practiced in an informal and ad hoc basis with little or no evidence of standardization.
The survey result also shows that, relatively privately owned financial institutions (1.3) reached
better level of IT Governance maturity than that of publicly owned (0.94) likewise though IT
Governance maturity was rated at initial stage (level 1) in the financial sector of Ethiopia, the
banking sector (1.4) reached better level of maturity than the insurance sector (0.7) based on
generic maturity scale from 0(non-existence) to 5(optimized).
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Keywords
Governance in the Financial Sector of Ethiopia