Chapter - 3
Chapter - 3
Chapter - 3
Audit planning is a vital area of the audit which is primarily conducted at the beginning of the
audit process. This chapter also considers the basic contents of audit working papers and audit
sampling.
Audit Objectives
The objective of the ordinary examination of financial statements by the auditor is expression of
an opinion on the fairness of the financial statements. It is customary in the audit to identify
audit objectives for the audit in general and for each account reported in the financial statements.
These objectives are derived from management’s assertions.
The auditor’s objectives are closely related to management assertions. Audit objectives are
intended to provide a framework to help the auditor accumulate sufficient and competent
evidence required by the third standard of fieldwork and decide the proper evidence to
accumulate given the circumstances of the engagement.
A distinction must be made between general audit objectives and specific audit objectives for
each account balance. The general audit objectives discussed here are applicable to every
account balance but stated in broad terms. Specific audit objectives are applied to each account
balance on the financial statement.
The relevance of the audit evidence should be considered in relation to the general audit
objectives of statements. To achieve this objective the auditor needs to support the following
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financial statement assertions (i.e. assertions by management embodied in the financial
statements).
1. Existence: - an asset or liability exists at a given date. Auditors spend a great deal of
time on this assertion confirming the existence of assets such as inventories, plant assets,
receivable, and cash. Clearly this is a fundamental assertion; no other assertion is
relevant if the asset or liability does not exist.
2. Completeness: - there are no unrecorded assets or liabilities, transaction or events.
3. Occurrence: - a transaction or event occurred during the relevant accounting period (i.e.
has correct cut-off been applied?).
4. Measurement: - a transaction or event is recorded at the proper amount and in the
correct period.
5. Ownership: - an asset pertains (i.e. belongs) to the entity.
6. Valuation: - the asset or liability is recorded at an appropriate carrying value.
7. Presentation and disclosure: - must be in accordance with the relevant legislation and
accounting standards (i.e. the applicable financial reporting framework).
Auditing Principles
Auditing principles are generally, guidelines that help direct or chart goals and aims. Principles
are based on concepts or assumptions, and/or developed from particular observations. The
following are the basic principles:
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in efficient and timely manner.
f. Audit evidence: - the auditor should obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence through
the performance of compliance and substantive procedures to enable him to draw
conclusion there from and give opinion on the financial statements.
g. Accounting system and internal control: The auditor should gain or understanding of
the accounting system and related internal controls to determine the nature, extent, and
timing of audit procedures.
Audit Standards
Standards are authoritative rules for measuring the quality of performance. The existence of
generally accepted auditing standards is evidence that auditors are very concerned with the
maintenance of a uniformly high quality of audit work by all independent public accountants.
Standards of fieldwork
1. The work is to be adequately planned and assistants, if any, are to be properly supervised.
2. The auditor should obtain a sufficient understanding of the internal control structure to plan
the audit and to determine the nature, extent and timing of tests to be performed.
3. Sufficient competent evidential matter is to be obtained through inspection, observation,
inquiries, and confirmation to afford a reasonable basis for an opinion regarding the financial
statements under examination.
Standards of reporting
1. The report shall state whether the financial statements are presented in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles.
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2. The report shall identify those circumstances in which such principles have not been
consistently observed in the current period in relation to the preceding period.
3. Informative disclosures in the financial statements are to be regarded as reasonably adequate
unless otherwise stated in the report.
4. The report shall either contain an expression of opinion regarding the financial statements,
taken as a whole, or an assertion to the effect than an opinion cannot be expressed.
Keep in mind, however, that these standards represent the minimum requirements for all audit
engagements.
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Sources of information
1. Communication with predecessor auditors.
3 Make enquiries of other third parties (e.g. banker.).
4 Consult the client’s legal counsel.
Fee arrangement: when the business engages the services of independent public accountant, it
will usually ask for an estimate of the cost of the audit.
Engagement letter: The preliminary understandings with the client should be summarized by
the auditors in an engagement letter, making clear the nature of the engagement, any limitations
on the scope of the audit, work to be performed by the client’s staff, schedule dates for
performance and completion of examination, and the basis for computing the auditors’ fee.
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Materiality: In planning the audit, auditors should design their audit procedures to avoid
wasting time searching for immaterial misstatements that cannot affect their report.
Audit risk: The term audit risk refers to the possibility that the auditors may unknowingly fail to
appropriately modify their opinion on financial statements that are materially misstated.
In developing an audit plan, the auditors must consider factors that affect audit risk.
e) Audit plans
The planning process is documented in the audit working papers through the presentation of
audit plans, audit programs, and time budget. An audit plan is an overview of the engagement,
outlining the nature and characteristics of the client’s business operations and the overall audit
strategy. A typical audit plan includes the following:
1. description of the client’s company-its structure, nature of business, &
organization.
2. objectives of the audit.
3. nature and of extent of other services.
4. timing and scheduling of audit work.
5. work to be done by the client’s staff.
6. staffing requirement during the engagement.
7. target dates for completing major segments of the engagement.
8. preliminary judgment about materiality and risk levels for the engagement.
Audit Sampling
1. Definition: Application of audit procedures to less than 100 % of the items within an account
balance or class of transactions to obtain and evaluate audit evidence about some
characteristic of the items selected in order to form or assist in forming a conclusion
concerning the population.
Sampling risk
Because the auditor dose not examine all the items in the population when applying audit
sampling, there is a risk that the conclusion that he draws will be different from that which he
would have drawn had he examined the entire population. This is ‘sampling risk’
The following are the basic factors affecting sample size:
1. population size.
2. standard deviation.
3. materiality.
4. reliability.
5. Constructing sampling
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The steps involved in sampling can be summarized as follows:
i- Sample design: - when designing an audit sample, the auditor should consider the
specific audit objectives, the population from which the auditor wishes to sample, and the
sample size
ii- Selection of the sample: - the auditor should select sample items in such a way that the
sample clan be expected to be representative of the population.
iii- Evaluation of the sample: - having carried out, on each sample item; those audit
procedures that are appropriate to the particular audit objective, the auditor should:
a) Analyze any errors detected in the sample.
b) Project the errors found in the sample to the population, and
c) Reassess the sampling risk.
After the general objectives are understood, specific objectives for each account balance on the
financial statements can be developed.
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