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Homework answers / question archive / Harvard University AUDIT 111 Chapter 1-Auditing and Internal Control TRUE/FALSE 1)Corporate management (including the CEO) must certify monthly and annually their organization’s internal controls over financial reporting
Harvard University
AUDIT 111
Chapter 1-Auditing and Internal Control
TRUE/FALSE
1)Corporate management (including the CEO) must certify monthly and annually their organization’s internal controls over financial reporting.
a. |
the cost of an internal control should be less than the benefit it provides |
b. |
a well-designed system of internal controls will detect all fraudulent activity |
c. |
the objectives achieved by an internal control system vary depending on the data processing method |
d. |
the effectiveness of internal controls is a function of the industry environment |
a. |
errors are made due to employee fatigue |
b. |
fraud occurs because of collusion between two employees |
c. |
the industry is inherently risky |
d. |
management instructs the bookkeeper to make fraudulent journal entries |
a. |
preventive control |
b. |
accounting control |
c. |
detective control |
d. |
corrective control |
a. |
credit check before approving a sale on account |
b. |
bank reconciliation |
c. |
physical inventory count |
d. |
comparing the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger to the control account |
a. |
preventive control |
b. |
detective control |
c. |
corrective control |
d. |
none of the above |
a. |
preventive control |
b. |
detective control |
c. |
corrective control |
d. |
Feed-forward control |
of a
a. |
preventive control |
b. |
detective control |
c. |
corrective control |
d. |
none of the above |
a. |
management philosophy and operating style |
b. |
organizational structure of the firm |
c. |
well-designed documents and records |
d. |
the functioning of the board of directors and the audit committee |
a. |
the firm has an up-to-date organizational chart |
b. |
monthly reports comparing actual performance to budget are distributed to managers |
c. |
performance evaluations are prepared every three years |
d. |
the audit committee meets quarterly with the external auditors |
a. |
the internal audit group reports to the audit committee of the board of directors |
b. |
there is no segregation of duties between organization functions |
c. |
there are questions about the integrity of management |
d. |
adverse business conditions exist in the industry |
a. |
identifies and records all valid financial transactions |
b. |
records financial transactions in the appropriate accounting period |
c. |
separates the duties of data entry and report generation |
d. |
records all financial transactions promptly |
a. |
to avoid collusion between the programmer and the computer operator |
b. |
to ensure that supervision is not required |
c. |
to prevent the record keeper from authorizing transactions |
d. |
to enable the firm to function more efficiently |
a. |
authorization |
b. |
management’s operating style |
c. |
independent verification |
d. |
accounting records |
a. |
independent verification |
b. |
authorization |
c. |
segregation of functions |
d. |
supervision |
a. |
supervision |
b. |
independent verification |
c. |
access controls |
d. |
accounting records |
a. |
access controls |
=b. |
segregation of functions |
c. |
independent verification |
d. |
accounting records |
a. |
bribery will be eliminated |
b. |
management will not override the company’s internal controls |
c. |
management are required to certify their internal control system |
d. |
firms will not be exposed to lawsuits |
a. |
the accounting system |
b. |
the control environment |
c. |
control procedures |
d. |
this is not a weakness |
a. |
segregation of duties |
b. |
independent verification |
c. |
accounting records |
d. |
supervision |
a. |
IT Controls, preventative controls, and Corrective controls |
b. |
physical controls, preventative controls, and corrective controls. |
c. |
general controls, application controls, and physical controls. |
d. |
transaction authorizations, segregation of duties, and risk assessment |
a. |
possibility of honest error |
b. |
circumvention |
c. |
management override |
d. |
stability of systems |
a. |
reduced cost of an external audit. |
b. |
prevents employee collusion to commit fraud. |
c. |
availability of reliable data for decision-making purposes. |
d. |
some assurance of compliance with the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977. |
e. |
some assurance that important documents and records are protected. |
a. |
The treasurer has the authority to sign checks but gives the signature block to the assistant treasurer to run the check-signing machine. |
b. |
The warehouse clerk, who has the custodial responsibility over inventory in the warehouse, selects the vendor and authorizes purchases when inventories are low. |
c. |
The sales manager has the responsibility to approve credit and the authority to write off accounts. |
d. |
The department time clerk is given the undistributed payroll checks to mail to absent employees. |
e. |
The accounting clerk who shares the record keeping responsibility for the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger performs the monthly reconciliation of the subsidiary ledger and the control account. |
a. |
evaluating internal controls |
b. |
preparing financial statements |
c. |
expressing an opinion |
d. |
analyzing financial data |
a. |
Auditors must maintain independence. |
b. |
IT auditors attest to the integrity of the computer system. |
c. |
IT auditing is independent of the general financial audit. |
d. |
IT auditing can be performed by both external and internal auditors. |
a. |
IT audits |
b. |
evaluation of operational efficiency |
c. |
review of compliance with legal obligations |
d. |
internal auditors perform all of the above tasks |
a. |
internal auditors represent the interests of the organization and external auditors represent outsiders |
b. |
internal auditors perform IT audits and external auditors perform financial statement audits |
c. |
internal auditors focus on financial statement audits and external auditors focus on operational audits and financial statement audits |
d. |
external auditors assist internal auditors but internal auditors cannot assist external auditors |
a. |
reduce audit fees |
b. |
ensure independence |
c. |
represent the interests of management |
d. |
the statement is not true; internal auditors are not permitted to assist external auditors with financial audits |
a. |
Auditors gather evidence using tests of controls and substantive tests. |
b. |
The most important element in determining the level of materiality is the mathematical formula. |
c. |
Auditors express an opinion in their audit report. |
d. |
Auditors compare evidence to established criteria. |
a. |
substantive testing |
b. |
tests of controls |
c. |
post-audit testing |
d. |
audit planning |
a. |
completing questionnaires |
b. |
interviewing management |
c. |
observing activities |
d. |
confirming accounts receivable |
a. |
examining the safety deposit box for stock certificates |
b. |
reviewing systems documentation |
c. |
completing questionnaires |
d. |
observation |
a. |
confirming accounts receivable |
b. |
counting inventory |
c. |
completing questionnaires |
d. |
counting cash |
a. |
control risk |
b. |
legal risk |
c. |
detection risk |
d. |
inherent risk |
a. |
the probability that the auditor will render an unqualified opinion on financial statements that are materially misstated |
b. |
associated with the unique characteristics of the business or industry of the client |
c. |
the likelihood that the control structure is flawed because controls are either absent or inadequate to prevent or detect errors in the accounts |
d. |
the risk that auditors are willing to take that errors not detected or prevented by the control structure will also not be detected by the auditor |
a. |
In the CBIS environment, auditors gather evidence relating only to the contents of databases, not the reliability of the computer system. |
b. |
Conducting an audit is a systematic and logical process that applies to all forms of information systems. |
c. |
Substantive tests establish whether internal controls are functioning properly. |
d. |
IT auditors prepare the audit report if the system is computerized. |
a. |
exists because all control structures are flawed in some ways. |
b. |
is the likelihood that material misstatements exist in the financial statements of the firm. |
c. |
is associated with the unique characteristics of the business or industry of the client. |
d. |
is the likelihood that the auditor will not find material misstatements. |
a. |
written assertions and a practitioner’s written report |
b. |
the engagement is designed to conduct risk assessment of the client’s systems to verify their degree of SOX compliance |
c. |
the formal establishment of measurements criteria |
d. |
the engagement is limited to examination, review, and application of agreed-upon procedures |
a. |
that all of the assets and equities on the balance sheet exist |
b. |
that all employees are properly trained to carry out their assigned duties |
c. |
that all transactions on the income statement actually occurred |
d. |
that all allocated amounts such as depreciation are calculated on a systematic and rational basis |
a. |
Auditors must determine, whether changes in internal control has, or is likely to, materially affect internal control over financial reporting. |
b. |
Auditors must interview management regarding significant changes in the design or operation of internal control that occurred since the last audit. |
c. |
Corporate management (including the CEO) must certify monthly and annually their organization’s internal controls over financial reporting. |
d. |
Management must disclose any material changes in the company’s internal controls that have occurred during the most recent fiscal quarter. |
a. |
authorizing a credit sale |
Preventive |
Detective |
b. |
preparing a bank reconciliation |
Preventive |
Detective |
c. |
locking the warehouse |
Preventive |
Detective |
d. |
preparing a trial balance |
Preventive |
Detective |
e. |
counting inventory |
Preventive |
Detective |
Use the internal control procedures listed below to complete statements 6 through 12.
|
segregation of duties |
specific authorization |
|
general authorization |
accounting records |
|
access controls |
independent verification |
|
supervision |
|
.
.
.
.
process.
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