Chapter 2 Aud 2015 DU
Chapter 2 Aud 2015 DU
Chapter 2 Aud 2015 DU
These standards are not sufficiently specific to provide any meaningful guide to practitioners, but
they do represent a framework.
Table 2.1: INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS ON AUDITING(ISA)
-These issues are normally addressed before a firm accepts a prospective client.
A) Adequate Te chnical Tr ainin g and Proficiency:
-The first general standard requires competence-adequate technical training & proficiency as
an auditor.
-This competence starts with formal education accounting because auditors hold themselves
out as experts in accounting standards, financial reporting, & auditing.
- Experience, another dimension of competence, it grows with on-the- job training in developing
& applying professional judgment in real-world audit situations.
-Recent court cases clearly demonstrate that auditors must be technically qualified and
experienced in those industries in which their audit clients are engaged.
- In any case in which the CPA are qualified to perform the work, a professional obligation
exists to acquire the requisite knowledge and skills, suggest someone else who is qualified to
perform the work, or decline the engagement.
-The auditor must also be free of management’s influence in performing the audit & in reporting the
findings.
-auditors are expected to be unbiased and impartial with respect to the F/S & other
information they audit.
-auditors expected to be fair for both to the companies & executives who issue financial
information & to the outside persons who use it.
-Due care includes consideration of the completeness of the audit documentation, the sufficiency of
the audit evidence, and the appropriateness of the audit report.
-As professionals, auditors must not act negligently or in bad faith, but they are not expected to be
infallible.
-The first standard requires that the audit be sufficiently planned to ensure an adequate audit and
proper supervision of assistants.
- Proper supervision is essential in auditing because a considerable portion of the field work is done
by less experienced staff members. junior auditors due to this reason it need special supervision.
-The professional standards contain several lists of consideration for planning & supervision an
audit. They are all concerned with
- The procedure in an audit program should be stated in enough detail to instruct the assistants about
the work to be done.
-An understanding of the client’s business & industry is an absolute necessity. This knowledge helps
auditors identifying areas for especial attention (the place where error or fraud might exist), evaluate
the reasonableness of accounting estimates made by management.
-To adequately perform an audit, the auditor must understand the client’s business and industry.
-This understanding helps the auditor identify significant client business risks and the risk of
significant misstatements in the financial statements.
- For example, to audit a bank, an auditor must understand the nature of the bank’s
operations, federal and state regulations applicable to banks, and risks affecting significant accounts
such as loan loss reserves.
-One of the most widely accepted concepts in the theory and practice of auditing is the importance
of the client’s system of internal control for mitigating client business risks, safeguarding assets
and records, and generating reliable financial information.
- If the auditor is convinced that the client has an excellent system of internal control, one that
includes adequate internal controls for providing reliable data, the amount of audit evidence to be
accumulated can be significantly less than when controls are not adequate.
-In some instances, internal control may be so inadequate as to preclude conducting an effective
audit.
c) Sufficient Appropriate Ev idence
-Decisions about how much and what types of evidence to accumulate for a given set of
circumstances require professional judgment.
-the ultimate objective of field work standard is to require the auditor to have a reasonable basis
for expressing an opinion on the entity’s F/Ss.
- This field work standard requires that the audit team collect & evaluate sufficient competent
evidence to afford a reasonable & logical basis for audit decisions.
- Evidence is defined as “all of the information used by the auditor in arriving at the conclusions
on which the audit opinion is based.”
END OF CH 2