Title: CHAPTER%202%20Accounting%20and%20accountants
1CHAPTER 2Accounting and accountants
2Contents
- Accounting function
- Accounting database
- Recording transactions
- Organization of data within the general ledger
- Control and audit
- Internal control
- Internal audit
- External audit
- Corporate governance
- Accounting profession
3Accounting function
- Financial accounting system objectives and scope
- Uniform accounting procedures
- Functional transaction processing systems
4Financial accounting system
- Objectives
- Track all economic transactions of the enterprise
- Record and process them logically in a database
- Provide reporting tools and formats to
communicate information useful to decision makers - Scope
- Highly dependent on the size of the company
5Decision makers
Business transactions
Information
Data
Financial accounting system
Tracking and recording of data
Processing of data
Reporting
6Uniform accounting procedures
- Uniform accounting systems are central to the
coordination and management of an international
group - Internal accounting manuals to standardize
procedures and interpretation of data - Uniform accounting rules (like IFRS) versus
national accounting rules
7Fig. 2.1 Group reporting flows
Subsidiaries
Local tax accounts
France
Italy
Group financial statements
Uniform accounting rules
Parent / holdingcompany
Nether-lands
(Germany)
8Functional transaction processing systems
- Functional systems capture different types of
transactions according to their main features,
like - Sales
- Purchases
- Payroll
- Treasury
- Investment in long-term capacity
- Transaction processing implies interactions
between the accounting function and operating
departments
9Accounting database
- General Ledger central accounting database
- Primary source of information for internal
(management) and external reporting purposes
10Figure 2.2 The financial accounting database
Register of amounts owed to suppliers
Salaries and social charges
Goods received from suppliers
Reports to manage-ment and outsiders
Other business expenses
General Ledger
Bank account cash in and out
Finance from shareholders and banks
Register of debts owed by clients
Purchase of long-term assets
Sale of goods to clients
11Recording transactions
- Information flows into the general ledger through
several layers of processing - Individual (daily) transactions are summarized by
period and by type - Through summarization aggregates are buit up for
the years activities
12Fig. 2.3 Building aggregates
(invoices, payments, receipts, expense notes,
etc.)
Daily transactions
prepared by week (or month) and by type of
transaction
General Ledger
total entered into
13Recording transactions (cont.)
- Journals
- Capture details of individual transactions
- Used to build up periodic summaries and feed
aggregated data into the general ledger - May be organized according to functional
transaction processing systems - General ledger
- Collection of summarized, aggregated transaction
data - Source for the preparation of periodic income
statements and balance sheets
14Recording transactions (cont.)
- Audit trail
- Traces the content of aggregates back to
transaction details - Chart of accounts
- Used to categorize and record transactions within
the accounting database according to the
double-entry accounting logic - State-mandated or voluntary
- XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language)
- Automated, flexible reporting tools
- Using specific tags of individual data items,
defined and linked through flexible taxonomies
15Organization of data within the general ledger
(G/L)
- In the G/L, data are stored according to the
double-entry system - The G/L is organized into a series of accounts
(cfr. chart of accounts) data files to record
transactions of a particular type - Specifics of an account
- Two columns for figures debits and credits
- Narrative commentary
- Cross-referencing details
16Control and audit
- Internal control
- Internal audit
- External audit
- Corporate governance
17Internal control
- Defining internal control
- Components of a system of internal control
- Control activities
- Preventive controls
- Detective controls
- Corrective controls
18Defining internal control
- Definition of COSO (Committee of Sponsoring
Organizations) -
- Internal control is a process, established,
operated and monitored by those charged with
governance and management of a company, to
provide reasonable assurance regarding the
achievement of objectives in the following
categories - a) The effectiveness and efficiency of the
companys operations - b) The reliability of its financial reporting
- c) Its compliance with applicable laws and
regulations.
19Internal control objectives (COSO)
- Sustaining the companys business operations
(efficiency and effectiveness concerns) - Preparing reliable financial reporting (including
financial statements) - Compliance with applicable laws and regulations
20Components of a system of internal control (COSO)
- A system of internal control consists of five
interrelated components - Control environment
- Risk assessment
- Control activities
- Information and communication
- Monitoring
- Each component is relevant for each internal
control objective
21Components of a system of internal control
22IC system components (COSO extracts)
- Control EnvironmentThe control environment sets
the tone of an organization, influencing the
control consciousness of its people. It is the
foundation for all other components of internal
control, providing discipline and structure.
Control environment factors include the
integrity, ethical values and competence of the
entity's people management's philosophy and
operating style the way management assigns
authority and responsibility, and organizes and
develops its people and the attention and
direction provided by the board of directors.
23IC system components (cont.)
- Risk AssessmentEvery entity faces a variety of
risks from external and internal sources that
must be assessed. A precondition to risk
assessment is establishment of objectives, linked
at different levels and internally consistent.
Risk assessment is the identification and
analysis of relevant risks to achievement of the
objectives, forming a basis for determining how
the risks should be managed. Because economic,
industry, regulatory and operating conditions
will continue to change, mechanisms are needed to
identify and deal with the special risks
associated with change.
24IC system components (cont.)
- Control ActivitiesControl activities are the
policies and procedures that help ensure
management directives are carried out. They help
ensure that necessary actions are taken to
address risks to achievement of the entity's
objectives. Control activities occur throughout
the organization, at all levels and in all
functions. They include a range of activities as
diverse as approvals, authorizations,
verifications, reconciliations, reviews of
operating performance, security of assets and
segregation of duties.
25IC system components (cont.)
- Information and CommunicationPertinent
information must be identified, captured and
communicated in a form and timeframe that enables
people to carry out their responsibilities.
Information systems produce reports, containing
operational, financial and compliance-related
information, that make it possible to run and
control the business. They deal not only with
internally generated data, but also information
about external events, activities and conditions
necessary to informed business decision-making
and external reporting. Effective communication
also must occur in a broader sense, flowing down,
across and up the organization. All personnel
must receive a clear message from top management
that control responsibilities must be taken
seriously. They must understand their own role in
the internal control system, as well as how
individual activities relate to the work of
others. They must have a means of communicating
significant information upstream. There also
needs to be effective communication with external
parties, such as customers, suppliers, regulators
and shareholders.
26IC system components (cont.)
- MonitoringInternal control systems need to be
monitored--a process that assesses the quality of
the system's performance over time. This is
accomplished through ongoing monitoring
activities, separate evaluations or a combination
of the two. Ongoing monitoring occurs in the
course of operations. It includes regular
management and supervisory activities, and other
actions personnel take in performing their
duties. The scope and frequency of separate
evaluations will depend primarily on an
assessment of risks and the effectiveness of
ongoing monitoring procedures. Internal control
deficiencies should be reported upstream, with
serious matters reported to top management and
the board.
27Control activities
- Control activities usually involve a policy
component and a procedure component - Policy establishes what should be done
- Procedure actions necessary to implement a
policy - Classification of control activities
- Preventive controls PP designed to prevent an
error or fraud from occurring - Detective controls PP designed to detect an
error or fraud as soon as posible - Corrective controls PP to correct problems in a
timely manner
28Separation of functions
- Separation of functions (segregation of duties)
as a preventive control measure - It calls for the separation of the four basic
functions of transaction processing - Authorizing transactions
- Executing transactions
- Recording transactions
- Safeguarding resources resulting from
consummating transactions - The objective is mainly to provide an environment
where fraud becomes difficult
29Defining internal audit
- Internal auditing is an independent, objective
assurance and consulting activity designed to add
value and improve an organisations operations.
It helps an organisation accomplish its
objectives by bringing a systematic, disciplined
approach to evaluate and improve the
effectiveness of risk management, control and
governance processes. - Institute of Internal Auditors
30Internal audit process
- Primary task
- Examine and evaluate the adequacy and
effectiveness of the internal control system - Evaluate the quality of performance in carrying
out assigned responsibilities - Can be considered to be part of the monitoring
component of a IC system - Its scope potentially covers all activities
within the company
31Independence of internal audit
- Independence with regard to the acitivities they
audit, is essential for the internal audit
function - Independence should be assured through
- Organizational position and authority within the
company - Recognition of professional objectivity
32Internal audit Hierarchical position (1)
33Internal audit Hierarchical position (2)
34Internal audit Hierarchical position (3)
General assembly
Board of directors
Audit committee
Management committee
CEO
Internal audit
35Institute of Internal Auditors (IIA)
- As an international professional body, the IIA
provides authoritative guidance - Standards for the Professional Practice of
Internal Auditing establish ethical (attribute
standards) and practice (performance standards)
guidelines - Certification programme leading to the
designation of Certified Internal Auditor
36Standards for the Professional Practice of
Auditing
- Attribute standards
- 1000 - Purpose, Authority, and Responsibility
- 1100 - Independence and Objectivity
- 1200 - Proficiency and Due Professional Care
- 1300 - Quality Assurance and Improvement Program
- Performance Standards
- 2000 Managing the Internal Audit Activity
- 2100 Nature of Work
- 2200 Engagement Planning.
- 2300 Performing the Engagement
- 2400 Communicating Results
- 2500 Monitoring Progress
- 2600 Management's Acceptance of Risks
37External audit
- External audit independent audit of a companys
financial statements carried out by external
auditors - Also referred to as statutory audit
- The external auditor expresses an opinion on the
representational fairness of the financial
statements in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles - Reassurance for outside stakeholders that the
financial statements are a valid representation
of the companys financial position and
performance
38External auditors
- Largest four international networks of external
auditors - PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC)
- KPMG
- Ernst Young
- Deloitte
- These Big Four dominate the audit market for
multinational companies
39Basic statutory audit tasks
- The basic statutory audit consists of two tasks
- To check that the accounting database effectively
picks up all the companys activities and is
correct - To check that the financial statements are a
correct representation of the accounting
database, use appropriate accounting policies and
are a reasonable representation of the companys
real state
40Report of the external auditor
- The external auditor signs a public report
- a standard attestation regarding the
representational fairness of the financial
statements - The public report may be accompanied by a
management letter - Directed to company management (not published)
- Comments on the audit findings, highlights
potential areas of weakness and makes
recommendations
41Corporate governance
- Corporate governance issues arise whenever
ownership of a company is separated from its
management - Central concern how managements freedom of
action may be limited by outside interests - Many countries have specific rules, regulations
and guidance on corporate governance
42Corporate governance recommendations
- Chairman of the Board of Directors (BOD) should
not be the CEO - Appointment of independent or non-executive
directors - BOD committees with independent directors
- Compensation committee
- Audit committee
- Nomination committee
43Accounting profession
- Main categories of accounting professionals
- Independent auditor
- Independent accountant
- Company accountant
- Independent auditor
- Specialists licensed to carry out the independent
audit required by company law - University degree professional examinations
at least three years as a student in a public
auditing firm - International variation in nature of scope of
statutory audit and in constraints on
auditor/client relationship
44Accounting profession (cont.)
- Independent accountant
- External professionals offering accounting
services to (generally small) companies - May also provide tax and general consulting
services, but not statutory audit services - Company accountant
- Internal accounting specialists, but not
necessarily governed by a professional
organization - No formal educational prerequisites