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Services
Solution Manual For Auditing & Assurance Services
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dk 9th Edition by Timothy Louwers, Penelope Bagley
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,Chapter 01 - Auditing and Assurance
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Services
CHAPTER 01 dk
Auditing and Assurance Servicesdk dk dk
LEARNING OBJECTIVESdk
Review Multiple Exercises, Problems, dk
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1. Define information risk and explain how
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the financial statement auditing process
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helps to reduce this risk, thereby
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reducing the cost of capital for a
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company.
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2. Define and contrast assurance, attestation,
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and financial statement auditing services.
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3. Describe and define the assertions that
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management makes about the recognition,
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measurement, presentation, and disclosure
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of the financial statements and explain
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why auditors use them as a focal point of
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the audit.
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4. Define professional skepticism and explain
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its key characteristics.
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5. Describe the organization of public
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accounting firms and identify the various
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services that they offer.
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6. Describe the audits and auditors in
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governmental, internal, and
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operational auditing.
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7. List and explain the requirements for
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becoming a certified public accountant
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(CPA) and other certifications available
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to an accounting professional.
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(*) Item relates to multiple learning objectives
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,Chapter 01 - Auditing and Assurance
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Services
SOLUTIONS FOR REVIEW CHECKPOINTS dk dk dk
1.1 Business risk is the risk that an entity will fail to meet its business objectives. When
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assessing business risk, a professional must consider all possible threats to an entity‗s goals
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and objectives. Some illustrative examples include the risk that: 1) its existing customers will
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start buying products or services from its primary competitors; 2) its product lines will become
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obsolete; 3) its taxes will increase; 4) key government contracts will be lost; 5) key employees
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will leave the entity; and many other examples exist.
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1.2 To help minimize business risk and take advantage of other opportunities presented in today‗s
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competitive business environment, decision makers such as chief executive officers (CEOs)
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demand timely, relevant, and reliable information. There are at least four environmental conditions
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that increase demand for reliable information. First, complexity which implies that events and
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transactions in today‗s global business environment can be complicated. Most investors do not
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have the level of expertise needed to properly account for complex transactions. Second is
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remoteness which implies that decision makers are often separated from current and potential
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business relationships due to distance and time. For example, investors may not be able to visit
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distant locations to check up on their investments. Third is time-sensitivity which implies that in
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today‗s economic environment, investors and other users of financial statements need to make
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decisions more rapidly than ever before. As a result, the ability to promptly obtain high-quality
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information is essential. Fourth is a consequence which implies that decisions may very well
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involve significant investments. As a result, the consequences can be severe if information
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cannot be obtained
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1.3 Of all the different risks discussed in the chapter up to this point, information risk is the one
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that is most likely to create the demand for independent and objective assurance services is
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information risk or the probability that the information circulated by an entity will be false or
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misleading. Because the primary source of information for investors and creditors is the company
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itself, an incentive exists for that company‗s management to make their business or service appear
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to be better than it actually may be, to put their best foot forward. As a result, preparers and
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issuers of financial information (directors, managers, accountants, and other people employed in a
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business) might benefit by giving false, misleading, or overly optimistic information. This
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potential conflict of interest between information providers and users which provides the
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underlying basis for the demand for reliable information.
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1.4 The four major elements of the broad definition of assurance services are
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Independence. CPAs want to preserve their reputation and competitive advantage by always
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preserving integrity and objectivity when performing assurance services.
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Professional services. Virtually all work performed by CPAs is defined as ―professional services‖
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as long as it involves some element of judgment based on education and experience.
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Improving the quality of information or its context. The emphasis is on ―information,‖ CPAs‗
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traditional area of expertise. CPAs can enhance quality by assuring users about the reliability and
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relevance of information, and these two features are closely related to the familiar credibility-
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lending products of attestation and audit services. ―Context‖ is relevance in a different light. For
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assurance services, improving the context of information refers to improving its usefulness when
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targeted to particular decision makers in the surroundings of particular decision problems.
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For decision makers. As the ―consumers‖ of assurance services, decision makers are the beneficiaries
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of the assurance services. Decision makers may or may not be the ―client‖ that pays the fee and may
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or may not be one of the parties to an assertion or other information, but they personify the
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consumer focus of new and different professional work.
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1.5 An assurance services engagement is any assignment that improves the quality of information, or
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its context, for decision makers. Because information (e.g., financial statements) are prepared by
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managers of an entity who have authority and responsibility for financial success or failure, an
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outsider may be skeptical that the information truly is objective, free from bias, fully informative,
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and free from material error, intentional or inadvertent. The services of an independent auditor
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helps resolve those doubts because the
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, Chapter 01 - Auditing and Assurance
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Services
auditor‗s success depends upon his or her independent, objective, and competent assessment of
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the information (e.g., the conformity of the financial statements with the appropriate reporting
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framework). The independent auditor‗s role is to lend credibility to the information; hence, the
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outsider will likely seek his or her independent opinion about the financial statements.
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1.6 An attestation engagement is ―an engagement in which a practitioner is engaged to issue or
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does issue a written communication that expresses a conclusion about the reliability of a
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written assertion that is the responsibility of another party‖ (SSAE 10, AT 101.01). To attest
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means to lend credibility or to vouch for the truth or accuracy of the statements that one party
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makes to another. The attest function is a term often applied to the activities of independent
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CPAs when acting as auditors of financial statements.
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1.7 An assurance service engagement is one that improves the quality of information, or its context,
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for decision makers. Thus, an attestation service engagement is one type of an assurance
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service. Another way of thinking about the issue is to remember that the financial statement audit
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engagement is one type of an attestation service. Please see exhibit 1.3 in the text which depicts
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the relationship among assurance, attestation, and auditing engagements.
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1.8 According to the American Accounting Association, ―Auditing is a systematic process of
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objectively obtaining and evaluating evidence regarding assertions about economic actions and
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events to ascertain the degree of correspondence between the assertions and established criteria
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and communicating the results to interested users.‖ In effect, auditors add reliability to the
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information that is provided to interested users. Of course, this definition is focused on an
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external reporting context. Students may also discuss how governmental and internal auditors
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operate as well.
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In response to ―What do auditors do?‖ students can respond by stating that auditors (1) obtain and
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evaluate evidence about assertions made by management about economic actions and events, (2)
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ascertain the degree of correspondence between the assertions and the appropriate reporting
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framework, and (3) issue an audit report (opinion). Students can also respond more generally by
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stating that auditors essentially lend credibility to the financial statements presented by
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management.
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1.9 Financial accounting refers to the process of recording, classifying, summarizing, and reporting
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about a company‗s assets, liabilities, capital, revenues, and expenses in the financial statements in
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accordance with the applicable financial reporting framework (e.g., GAAP). In so doing, the
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management team is making several assertions about the financial statements. The financial
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accounting process is the responsibility of the management team.
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Financial statement auditing refers to the process whereby professional auditors gather evidence
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related to the assertions that management makes in the financial statements, evaluates the evidence
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and concludes on the fairness of the financial statements in a report.
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They differ because accountants produce the financial statements in accordance with the applicable
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financial reporting framework. After this is complete, financial statement auditors then perform
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procedures to ascertain whether the financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the
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applicable financial reporting framework.
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1.10 The two major classifications of ASB assertions with several assertions in each
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dk classification are: Assertions About Classes of Transactions and Events, and Related
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Occurrence assertion: The objective is to establish with evidence that transactions giving rise to
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assets, liabilities, sales, and expenses occurred. Key questions include ―Did the recorded sales
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transactions really occur?‖
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Completeness assertion: The objective is to establish with evidence that all transactions of the
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period that should be are included in the financial statements (including footnotes). Completeness
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also refers to proper inclusion in financial statements of all revenue, expense, and related
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