Activity Sheet - Module 6
1. Define internal control.
Internal controls are the mechanisms, rules, and procedures implemented by a
company to ensure the integrity of financial and accounting information, promote
accountability, and prevent fraud. Besides complying with laws and regulations and
preventing employees from stealing assets or committing fraud, internal controls can help
improve operational efficiency by improving the accuracy and timeliness of financial
reporting.
2. Internal control provides reasonable assurance. Explain.
Internal controls provide reasonable assurance by performing and audit to obtain
evidence that is sufficient to obtain reasonable assurance about whether material
weaknesses exist as of the date specified in management’s assessment and to give a
reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external
purposes.
3. What are the objectives of a system of internal control?
The primary purpose of internal controls is to help safeguard an organization and
further its objectives. Internal controls function to minimize risks and protect assets,
ensure accuracy of records, promote operational efficiency, and encourage adherence to
policies, rules, regulations, and laws.
4. Enumerate, and explain briefly, the components of an internal control.
Control Environment. The control environment is the attitude toward internal control
and control consciousness established and maintained by the management and the
employees of an organization. It is the foundation for all other components of internal
control, providing discipline and structures. The primary responsibility for the prevention
and detection of fraud and error rests with both those charged with governance and the
management of the entity.
Risk Assessment Process. The risk assessment process is the identification and analysis of
relevant risks to achievement of the objective, forming a basis for determining how the
risks should be managed. They ultimately impact an organization’s ability to accomplish its
mission. To have reasonable assurance that the organization will achieve its objectives,
management should ensure each risk is assessed and handled properly.
Control Activities. Control activities are that help prevent or reduce the risks that can
impede accomplishment of the organization’s objectives and mission. Management should
establish control activities to accomplish the organization’s objectives and mission
effectively and efficiently.
Information System and Communication. Control activities is the exchange of useful
information between and among people and organizations to support decisions and
coordinate activities. Within an organization, information should be communicated to
management and other employees who need it in a form and within a time frame that helps
them to carry out their responsibilities. Communication also takes place with outside
parties such as customers, suppliers, and regulators. It is needed at all levels of the of an
organization to run business and move toward achievement of the entity’s objectives in all
departments.
Monitoring of Controls. Monitoring of controls is a process to assess the quality of
internal control performance over time. It involves assessing the design and operation of
controls on a timely basis and taking necessary corrective actions. Its purpose is to ensure
that controls continue to operate effectively.
5. What is the control environment? What are the elements that comprise the control
environment?
Control environment is the attitude toward internal control and control
consciousness established and maintained by the management and the employees of an
organization. It is the foundation for all other components of internal control, providing
discipline and structures. The elements of the control environment are the communication
and enforcement of integrity and ethical values, commitment to competence, participation
by those charged with governance, management’s philosophy and operating style,
organizational structure, assignment of authority and responsibility, and human resources
policies and practices.
6. What is meant by risk assessment process?
Risk assessment process is the process for identifying and responding to business
risk and the results thereof. The process of identifying and analyzing risk is an ongoing
iterative process and is a critical component of an effective internal control system.
Management must focus carefully on risks at all levels of the entity and take the
necessary actions to manage them.
7. What is an information system?
Information system are interrelated components working together to collect,
process, store, and disseminate information to support decision making, coordination,
control, analysis, and visualization in an organization. Information system are tools used
to support processes, operations, intelligence, and IT. Information system tools move data
and manage information. They produce data-driven reports that help businesses make the
right decisions at the right time.
8. What are control activities?
Control activities are policies and procedures, which are the actions of the people
to implement the policies, to help ensure that management directives identified as
necessary to address risks are carried out. Control activities can be preventive or detective
activities. Control activities occur at all levels and functions of the agency. Management
should establish control activities that are effective and efficient. The commonly used
control activities are performance reviews, information processing, physical controls, and
segregation of duties. Control activities, no matter how well designed and executed, can
provide only reasonable assurance regarding achievement of objectives.
9. Give the different types of control activities.
Performance reviews. Provide management with an overall indication of weather
personnel at various levels are effectively pursuing the objectives of the organization. By
investigating the reasons for unexpected performance, management may make timely
changes in strategies and plans or take other appropriate corrective action.
Information processing. A variety of controls activities are performed to check the
accuracy, completeness, and authorization of transaction. The two broad categories of
information processing controls include general control activities, which apply to all
information processing procedures, and application control activities, which apply only
tone particular activity.
Physical Controls. These controls include those that provide physical security over both
records and other assets. Activities that safeguard records include maintaining control at
all times over unissued prenumbered documents, as well as other journal and ledgers, and
restricting access to computer programs and data files.
Segregation of duties. No one department or person should handle all aspects of a
transaction from beginning to end.
10. Why is it necessary to monitor controls?
It is necessary to mitigate the risk of fraud in your business or organization. It is
also to see the changes happening in your system that needs an update or adjustments. It
is also necessary to monitor your control to ensures that internal control continues to
operate effectively.
11. What are the inherent limitations of internal controls?
A system of controls does not provide absolute assurance that the control
objectives of an organization will be met. Instead, there are several inherent
limitations in any system that reduce the level of assurance. These inherent
limitations are as follows:
Collusion. Two or more people who are intended by a system of control to keep
watch over each other could instead collude to circumvent the system.
Human error. A person involved in a control system could simply make a mistake,
perhaps forgetting to use a control step. Or the person does not understand how a
control system is to be used or does not understand the instructions associated with
the system. This may be caused by the assignment of the wrong person to a task.
Management override. Someone on the management team who has the authority to do
so could override any aspect of a control system for his personal advantage.
Missing segregation of duties. A control system might have been designed with an
insufficient segregation of duties, so that one person can interfere with its proper
operation.
12. Enumerate, in chronological order, the steps followed in the study and evaluation of
internal controls. Explain each step briefly.
Obtain an understanding of the client’s internal control. The auditor should obtain
and document an understanding of the client’s financial statements.
Make a preliminary assessment of control risk. The assessment shall be the basis for
determining the nature, timing, and extent of substantive test.
Determine the appropriate response to the assessed risks. To reduce risk to an
acceptable level, the auditor should determine overall responses to assessed risks at the
financial statement level and should design and perform further audit procedures to
respond to the assessed risk at the assertion level.
Reassess level of control risk. The auditor should evaluate whether the internal controls
are designed and operating as contemplated in the preliminary assessment of control risk.
Determine the nature, extent, and timing of substantive tests. The auditor should
design and preform substantive procedures for each material class of transactions,
account balance, and disclosures.
13. What is a transaction walkthrough?
A transaction walkthrough is a procedure used during an audit of an entity’s accounting
system to gauge its reliability. A walk-through test traces a transaction step by step
through the accounting system from its inception to the final disposition. However, walk-
throughs are not required for accountants but can be instrumental in addressing weakness
and problems.
14. What are the different ways by which an understanding of controls is documented?
These following are the different ways by which an understanding of control is
documented.
Flow Charts
Narrative descriptions
Internal control questionnaire
Risk and Control Matrices
Policy and procedure manuals
Sound documentation
15. When is the control risk assessment High? Less than high?
The control risk assessment is high when the entity does not have effective
internal controls to prevent fraud and misstatements. It is less than high when the entity
has effective controls to prevent fraud and misstatements.
16. How does a high control risk assessment affect the planned audit approach?
A high control risk assessment increases the scope of audit in the planned audit
approach.
17. Give examples of responses to the assessed risk of material misstatement.
Conducting more audit procedures. By conducting more audit procedures, it would
help to detect the risk in fraud and material misstatements.
Performing more substantive procedures to obtain more evidence. Focusing on the
on-going procedures would help minimize the errors made and find more evidence.
Increase the scope of audit. Giving the auditor a larger access would help to detect more
fraud and material misstatements in the system.
18. What is the relationship of a less than high control risk assessment to the nature, extent,
and timing of substantive tests?
The auditor’s risk assessment influences nature, extent, and timing of substantive
tests that the lower the assessed level of control risk, the less evidence the auditor needs
from substantive test.
19. May substantive tests be eliminated?
No, the assessed level of control risk cannot be sufficiently low to eliminate the
need to perform any substantive tests for all the financial statements assertions.
Consequently, regardless of the assessed levels of control risk, the auditor should perform
some substantive test for significant account balances and transaction classes.
20. How are audit matters related to internal control communicated to management and to
those charged with governance?
It matters because the auditor shall communicate to management at an appropriate
level of responsibility on a timely basis to know the significant deficiencies in internal
control and other deficiencies in internal control identified during the audit that have not
been communicated to management by other parties.