Jawaban Soal Chapter 15 Sebagian
Jawaban Soal Chapter 15 Sebagian
Jawaban Soal Chapter 15 Sebagian
15-2 SAS 67 (AU 330.20) discusses the use of negative accounts receivable
confirmations as follows:
15-4 The following are balance-related audit objectives and related audit
procedures for the audit of accounts receivable.
BALANCE-RELATED AUDIT
OBJECTIVE AUDIT PROCEDURE
Accounts receivable in the aged Trace twenty accounts from the trial
trial balance agree with related balance to the related accounts in the
master file amounts; the total is master file.
correctly added and agrees with the Foot two pages of the trial and balance,
general ledger. total all pages, and trace to the general
ledger.
The accounts receivable in the Confirm accounts receivable using positive
aged trial balance exist. confirmations. Confirm all amounts over
$15,000 and a nonstatistical sample of the
remainder.
Existing accounts receivable are Trace ten accounts from the accounts
included in the aged trial balance. receivable master file to the aged trial balance.
Accounts receivable in the trial Confirm accounts receivable using positive
balance are accurately recorded. confirmations. Confirm all amounts over
$15,000 and a nonstatistical sample of the
remainder.
Accounts receivable in the aged Review the receivables listed on the aged trial
trial balance are properly classified. balance for notes and related party receivables.
Transactions in the sales and Select the last 10 sales transactions from the
collection cycle are recorded in the current year's sales journal and the first 10
proper period. from the subsequent year's and trace each one
to the related shipping documents, checking for
the date of actual shipment and the correct
recording.
Accounts receivable in the trial Review the minutes of the board of directors for
balance are owned. any indication of pledged or factored accounts
receivable.
Accounts receivable in the trial Discuss with the credit manager the likelihood
balance are stated at realizable of collecting older accounts. Examine
value. subsequent cash receipts and the credit file on
older accounts to evaluate whether receivables
are collectible.
Accounts in the sales and collection Review the minutes of the board of directors
cycle are properly presented and meetings for any indication of pledged or
disclosed. factored accounts receivable.
15-8 In most audits it is more important to carefully test the cutoff for sales
than for cash receipts because sales cutoff misstatements are more likely to
affect net earnings than are cash receipt cutoff misstatements. Cash receipt
cutoff misstatements generally lead to a misclassification of accounts
receivable and cash and, therefore, do not affect income.
To perform a cutoff test for sales, the auditor should obtain the number
of the last shipping document issued before year-end and examine shipping
documents representing shipments before and after year-end and the related
sales invoices to determine that the shipments were recorded as sales in the
appropriate period.
The propriety of the cash receipts cutoff is determined through tests of
the year-end bank reconciliation. Deposits in transit at year-end should be
traced to the subsequent bank statement. Any delays in crediting deposits by
the bank should be investigated to determine whether the cash receipts books
were held open.
15-10 There are two common types of confirmations used for confirming
accounts receivable: "positive" confirmations and "negative" confirmations. A
positive confirmation is a letter, addressed to the debtor, requesting that the
recipient indicate directly on the letter whether the stated account balance is
correct or incorrect and, if incorrect, by what amount. A negative confirmation
is also a letter, addressed to the debtor, but it requests a response only if the
recipient disagrees with the amount of the stated account balance. A positive
confirmation is more reliable evidence because the auditor can perform
follow-up procedures if a response is not received from the debtor. With a
negative confirmation, failure to reply must be regarded as a correct
response, even though the debtor may have ignored the confirmation request.
Offsetting the reliability disadvantage, negative confirmations are less
expensive to send than positive confirmations, and thus more of them can be
distributed for the same total cost. The determination of which type of
confirmation to be sent is an auditor's decision, and it should be based on the
facts in the audit. SAS 67 (AU 330) states that it is acceptable to use
negative confirmations only when all of the following circumstances are
present:
15-12 The most important factors affecting the sample size in confirmations of
accounts receivable are:
Tolerable misstatement
Inherent risk (relative size of total accounts receivable, number
of accounts, prior year results, and expected misstatements)
Control risk
Achieved detection risk from other substantive tests (extent and
results of substantive tests of transactions, analytical
procedures, and other tests of details)
Type of confirmation (negatives normally require a larger sample
size)