Answer-Internal Control
Answer-Internal Control
Answer-Internal Control
According to PSA 3105, internal control is the process designed and effected
by those charged with governance, management and other personnel to
provide reasonable assurance about the achievement of an entity’s objective
with regard to reliability of financial reporting, effectiveness and efficiency of
operations and compliance with applicable laws and regulations.
There are five interrelated components of the entity’s internal control, namely:
5. What is the control environment? What are the elements that comprise
the control environment?
The control environment includes the attitudes, awareness, and actions of
management and those charged with governance concerning the entity’s
internal control and its importance in the entity.
Control activities are the policies and procedures to help ensure that
management directives are carried out.
Specific control activities that are relevant to financial statement audit would
include:
Performance Reviews
Information Processing
Physical Controls
Segregation of Duties
Authorization
There are inherent limitations that may affect the internal control’s effectiveness.
These inherent limitations include:
12. Enumerate, in chronological order, the steps followed in the study and
evaluation of internal controls. Explain each step briefly.
This is a one or two transactions through the entire accounting systems that
are being traced from their initial recording at source to their final
destination as a component of an account balance in the financial statements.
15. When is the control risk assessment High? Less than high?
When the auditor’s knowledge of the entity’s internal control indicates that
internal controls related to a particular assertion are not effective, the
auditor may simply assess control risk at a high level. On the other hand, if
the auditor concludes that it is more efficient to rely on the entity’s internal
control systems, the auditor would plan to assess control risk at less than
high level.
16. How does a high control risk assessment affect the planned audit
approach?
18. What is the relationship of a less than high control risk assessment to
the nature, extent, and timing of substantive tests?
The lower the assessment of control risk, the more support the auditor should
obtain that the internal control is suitably designed and operating effectively.
Thus, the greater the reliance the auditor plans to place on internal control, the
more extensive the tests of those controls need to be performed.