Internal Audit
Internal Audit
Internal Audit
Internal audit
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Accountancy
Key concepts Accountant Accounting period Bookkeeping Cash and accrual basis Cash flow management Chart of accounts Constant Purchasing Power Accounting Cost of goods sold Credit terms Debits and credits Double-entry system Fair value accounting FIFO & LIFO GAAP / IFRS General ledger Goodwill Historical cost Matching principle Revenue recognition Trial balance Fields of accounting Cost Financial Forensic Fund Management Tax Financial statements Statement of Financial Position Statement of cash flows Statement of changes in equity Statement of comprehensive income Notes MD&A XBRL Auditing Auditor's report Financial audit GAAS / ISA Internal audit SarbanesOxley Act Accounting qualifications CA CPA CCA CGA CMA CAT This box: view talk edit Internal auditing is an independent, objective assurance and consulting activity designed to add value and improve an organization's operations. It helps an organization accomplish its objectives by bringing a systematic, disciplined approach to evaluate and improve the effectiveness of risk management, control, and governance processes.[1] Internal auditing is a catalyst for improving an organizations effectiveness and efficiency by providing insight and recommendations based on analyses and assessments of data and business processes. With commitment to integrity and accountability, internal auditing provides value to governing bodies and senior management as an objective source of independent advice. Professionals called internal auditors are employed by organizations to perform the internal auditing activity.
The scope of internal auditing within an organization is broad and may involve topics such as the efficacy of operations, the reliability of financial reporting, deterring and investigating fraud, safeguarding assets, and compliance with laws and regulations. Internal auditing frequently involves measuring compliance with the entity's policies and procedures. However, internal auditors are not responsible for the execution of company activities; they advise management and the Board of Directors (or similar oversight body) regarding how to better execute their responsibilities. As a result of their broad scope of involvement, internal auditors may have a variety of higher educational and professional backgrounds. Publicly-traded corporations typically have an internal auditing department, led by a Chief Audit Executive ("CAE") who generally reports to the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors, with administrative reporting to the Chief Executive Officer. The profession is unregulated, though there are a number of international standard setting bodies (IIA, IAASB, ISACA... Cf. paragraph standard setting below).
Contents
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1 Other definitions 2 History of internal auditing 3 Standard setting bodies and/or auditors' associations o 3.1 International standard setting bodies and/or auditors' associations o 3.2 National/Local internal audit bodies o 3.3 Specialized audit associations and other institutions 4 Internal Audit qualifications 5 Organizational independence 6 Role in internal control 7 Role in risk management 8 Role in corporate governance 9 Nature of the internal audit activity 10 Internal audit reports 11 Developing the plan of engagements 12 Best Practices in Internal Auditing o 12.1 Measuring the internal audit function o 12.2 Developing and retaining staff o 12.3 Reporting of critical findings 13 References
The definition above (first sentence of this page) is in essence the IIA's definition.[2] A similar definition has been developed by the accounting profession and adopted by the government auditors: the ISA 610 and the INTOSAIs standard ("ISSAI") 1003 define the Internal audit function as "An appraisal activity established or provided as a service to the entity. Its functions include, amongst other things, examining, evaluating and monitoring the adequacy and effectiveness of internal control."
The Institute of Internal Auditors ("IIA") has established Standards for the Professional Practice of Internal Auditing[3] and has over 150,000 members representing 165 countries, including approximately 65,000 Certified Internal Auditors.[4] The IFAC's IAASB is the independent standard setting body which issue external auditing, review, other assurance related services and quality control standards to be applied by the global external auditing profession[5]. Some standards target the internal auditing practices, cf. the International Standards on Auditing 40X and 610. The IRCA International Register of Certificated Auditors, formed in 1984, is a division of the Chartered Quality Institute. Based in the UK it claims 14,750 members in 150 countries.
European Confederation of Institutes of Internal Auditing (ECIIA) UK and Ireland: the internal audit profession is represented by the Chartered Institute of Internal Auditors[6]. France: IFACI Germany: DIIR
IS auditing: ISACA Anti-fraud auditing: ACFE Environmental auditing: INTOSAI's Working Group on Environmental Auditing (WGEA); Environmental Auditors Registration Association, Regional Institute of Environmental Technology (According to their website, EARA is the leading UK membership organisation dedicated to the promotion of the goal of sustainable development.); The Institute of Environmental Management And Assessment[7] in UK, now maintains the Environmental Auditors Register of the erstwhile EARA... etc.
Risk Management: Federation of European Risk Management Associations (FERMA), etc. Quality auditing: Cf. International Organization for Standardization and its related national standards organizations.
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IIA: Certified Internal Auditor (CIA); Certification in Control Self-Assessment (CCSA); Certified Government Auditing Professional (CGAP) for Government performance auditing and Government Auditors; Certified Financial Services Auditor (CFSA). ISACA: Certified Information Systems Auditor (CISA); Certified in the Governance of Enterprise IT (CGEIT); Certified in Risk and Information Systems Control. CIIA Chartered Institute of Internal Auditors: IACert, PIIA, CMIIA...
1) The reporting line or status of the CAE The Chief Audit Executive must report to a level within the organization that allows the internal audit activity to fulfill its responsibilities. The chief audit executive must confirm to the board, at least annually, the organizational independence of the internal audit activity (IIA standard 1110).
Organizational independence is effectively achieved when the chief audit executive reports functionally to the board (IIA practice advisory 1110A1). The board is a governing body, such as the board of directors, supervisory board, head of an agency or legislative body, board of governors or trustees of a nonprofit organization, or any other designated body of the organization, including the audit committee to whom the chief audit executive may functionally report (IIA Glossary).
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2) Attitude of auditors, procedures of the internal audit department. The internal audit activity must be free from interference in determining the scope of internal auditing, performing work, and communicating results (IIA practice advisory 1110A1). 3) Communication right. The chief audit executive must communicate and interact directly with the Board of Directors (IIA standard 1111).
According to Mautz R.K. & Sharaf H.A, American Accounting Association,[8] there are three main ways in which the auditors independence can manifest itself: Programming independence, Investigative independence, reporting independence. For more detail, see the wikipage Auditor independence which deals with the independence of the external auditors. The European Union is strongly in favor of "Audit committees and an effective internal control system" (8th EU Company Law Directive on Statutory Audit[9]). This 8th Directive states that "Each public-interest entity shall have an audit committee" which inter alia shall "monitor the effectiveness of the company's internal control, internal audit where applicable, and risk management systems". The European Confederation of Institutes of Internal Auditing (ECIIA)[10] and Federation of European Risk Management Associations (FERMA) also support the independence of Internal Auditing. Their guidance[11] on the 8th EU Company Law Directive states The head of internal audit reports periodically to the board or the audit committee and to senior management on the internal audit activitys purpose, authority, responsibility and performance relative to its plan. The main reporting line is to the audit committee. Regarding public institutions, the same principle of independence of internal audit applies; cf. INTOSAIs standard GOV9140 "Internal auditor independence in the public sector endorsed in 2010, article 9.32.[12] The CAE should report ... to those charged with governance for strategic direction, reinforcement, and accountability. Those charged with governance (e.g. the audit committee) should safeguard the independence by approving the internal audit charter and (where applicable) the mandate." The independence of the Internal Audit is applied by most international institutions: for instance, the European Commission audit is accountable to the Audit Progress Committee; the IBRD Auditor General reports to the president and to the audit committee comprising eight of the 24 executive directors; The IMFs internal audit is overseen by the External Audit Committee (three members, all external and with the accounting and financial expertise required); The OSCEs Office of Internal Oversight reports to the Secretariat General and the Permanent Council...
Internal auditing activity is primarily directed at improving internal control. Under the COSO Framework, internal control is broadly defined as a process, effected by an entity's board of directors, management, and other personnel, designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the achievement of objectives in the following internal control categories:
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Effectiveness and efficiency of operations. Reliability of financial reporting. Compliance with laws and regulations.
Management is responsible for internal control. Managers establish policies and processes to help the organization achieve specific objectives in each of these categories. Internal auditors perform audits to evaluate whether the policies and processes are designed and operating effectively and provide recommendations for improvement. In the United States, internal auditors may assist management with compliance with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX).
By analyzing and recommending business improvements in critical areas, auditors help the organization meet its objectives. In addition to assessing business processes, specialists called Information Technology (IT) Auditors review information technology controls.
Internal auditors often conduct a series of interviews of senior management to identify potential engagements. Changes in people, processes, or systems often generate audit project ideas. Various documents are reviewed, such as strategic plans, financial reports, consulting studies, etc. Further, the results of prior audits and resolution of open issues are considered. For example, automated programs such as NEMEA Compliance Center can collect responses, produce and write standardized compliance reports for an organization seeking or issuing compliance rules. Even if a business area is important, prior audit work and the nature and status of open issues may render further audit effort unnecessary. If the organization has a formal enterprise risk management (ERM) program, the risks identified therein help limit the amount of separate risk assessment performed by Internal Audit. The preliminary plan of engagements is documented and prioritized. Audit resources and expertise are then considered and a final plan is presented to senior management and the Audit Committee. The presentations vary based on the needs of the stakeholders and may include the following:
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Summary of key goals, risks and corresponding major audits, to illustrate alignment; Analyses of audit effort along a variety of dimensions (e.g., by business segment, COSO objective category, IT, Sarbanes-Oxley, vs. prior year, etc.) along with commentary regarding changes; Brief description of critical potential audit engagements identified; Audit engagements requested but not planned for execution due to prioritization and resources; Required co-sourcing effort, typically where outside expertise is required or during peak periods; Coordination with other risk functions, such as legal, compliance or insurance, to ensure coverage of key organizational risks; Update on audit staffing levels, experience and certification; and Appendix materials, such as planning approach, assumptions (e.g., days per auditor and staffing level) and brief descriptions of all planned audits and related prioritization.
Quantitative measures can also be used to measure the functions level of execution and qualifications of its personnel. Key measures include: Plan completion: This is a measure of the degree to which the annual plan of engagements is completed, measured at a point in time. This may be measured using the number of audit engagements completed, weighted by the planned size of each assignment, with estimates for audits in-progress. Measured throughout the year, it is compared against the percentage of the year elapsed. Report issuance: This is a measure of the time elapsed from completion of testing to issuance of the final audit report, including managements action plans. This can be measured in average days or percentage of reports issued within a certain standard, such as 30 days. Establishing expectations for the timing of managements response to report recommendations is critical. In addition, the scope and degree of change involved in the reports action plans are key variables. For example, a report for a single retail store requiring only the store managers action might take 35 days to issue. However, a report consolidating findings from 20 retail stores, with action plans with national implications determined by top management, may take 3060 days in complex organizations. Issue closure: Reported audit findings are often called issues or deficiencies. Professional standards require audit functions to track reported findings to resolution, which effectively requires the maintenance of an issues follow-up database. The number of days that reported issues remain open, or open after their agreed-upon closure date, are key measures. In addition, reporting database statistics such as the number of issues open (unresolved), closed (resolved), and issues opened/closed during a given period are useful statistics. Staff qualifications: This can be measured through the percentage of staff with professional certifications, graduate degrees, and overall years of experience. Staff utilization rate: This is measured as the percentage of time spent on audit engagements, as opposed to administrative time such as training or vacation. Many internal audit departments track time by audit engagement. This is typically captured in a database or spreadsheet. Staffing level: The number of positions filled relative to the authorized staffing level. Due to the challenge of finding qualified staff, departments may have rotational programs to bring in management to complete tours in the function or be "guest" auditors. Audit departments also "co-source," meaning they obtain contract auditors from service providers.
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Ensuring staff participates in audit engagements from start to finish, to learn all phases of the audit process Providing opportunities to lead (in-charge) assignments, starting with more structured engagements such as Sarbanes-Oxley work Participating on departmental improvement task forces, such as preparation for quality assurance review Participating in the recruiting and interviewing process for new hires Rotating through various audit teams (in larger departments) or audits of various businesses Providing both outside training (e.g., seminars) and in-house training (e.g., company systems) for two weeks/year Participation in annual risk assessment activities, whether asking key questions or just taking notes
[edit] References
1. ^ IIA's definition of audit. 2. ^ "IIA definition of Internal Audit". IIA. http://www.theiia.org/guidance/standards-andguidance/ippf/definition-of-internal-auditing/. Retrieved 25 March 2011. 3. ^ IIA Website-Standards 4. ^ IIA Website 5. ^ [1] Official website of the International Federation of Accountants, IAASB 6. ^ http://www.iia.org.uk/ 7. ^ http://www.iema.net 8. ^ Mautz R.K. & Sharaf H.A (1961) The Philosophy of Auditing, American Accounting Association. & Dunn, J., 1996. Auditing Theory and Practice. 2nd ed. Prentice Hall 9. ^ 8th European Company Law Directive on Statutory Audit = Directive 2006/43/EC of the European parliament and of the Council of 17/5/2006 on statutory audits of annual accounts http://eurlex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2006:157:0087:0087:EN:PDF