This study examines the effectiveness of internal control standards in enhancing financial risk management efficiency in the banking sector. Drawing on COSO and Basel frameworks, the research highlights how internal controls specifically risk assessment, monitoring, control activities, and information systems strengthen banks’ resilience against credit, liquidity, market, and operational risks. Using a descriptive analytical approach and secondary data from 15 commercial and investment banks across North America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East (2019–2024), the study evaluates the relationship between internal control implementation and key indicators such as Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR), Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR), and Non-Performing Loan (NPL) ratios. Findings reveal a significant positive relationship between the quality of internal controls and financial stability, with banks adopting stronger control frameworks consistently demonstrating higher CAR and LCR values and lower NPL ratios. Moreover, risk assessment and monitoring emerged as the most influential control components in improving efficiency. The study concludes that internal control standards function not only as compliance requirements but also as strategic instruments that enhance resilience, transparency, and sustainable financial performance. Practical recommendations include greater integration of controls into enterprise risk management (ERM) frameworks, investment in digital monitoring tools, and continuous training to align controls with evolving risks. These results provide value for policymakers, regulators, and practitioners seeking to strengthen governance and risk oversight in the banking industry.
Hadi et al. (Fri,) studied this question.