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Fundamentals
of Auditing ACC 311
VU
Lesson
42
PLANNING
AN AUDIT OF FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
Purpose
of Planning
The auditor
should plan the audit so that the
engagement will be performed in an effective
manner.
Planning
an audit involves:
1.
Establishing the overall audit strategy
for the engagement
and
2.
Developing an audit plan, in order to
reduce audit risk to an acceptably
low level.
Planning
involves the Engagement
Partner (auditor) and
other
key members of the
engagement
team
to benefit from their
experience and insight and to
enhance the effectiveness
and efficiency of
the
planning process.
Adequate
planning helps in achieving the
following:
· Ensure
that appropriate attention is devoted to
important
areas of the audit, like;
related parties
transactions,
outsourced activities (debt/revenue
collection), payroll, sales, acquisition
of non-
current
assets.
· Potential
problems, like; slow availability of
information, application of new
regulations etc. are
identified
and resolved on a timely
basis
· Audit
engagement is properly organized and
managed in order to be performed in an
effective
and
efficient manner.
· Proper
assignment of work to engagement
team members,
· Facilitation
of direction and supervision of
engagement team members and
the review of their
work
· Coordination
of work done by auditors of
components and
experts.
The
nature and extent of planning activities
will vary according to
the
· Size
and complexity of the
entity
· Auditor's
previous experience with the
entity
· Changes
in circumstances that occur during
the audit engagement.
Planning
is a continual process that often
begins shortly after the completion of the previous
audit
and
continues until the completion of the
current audit engagement.
Planning
Activities
I
The
Overall Audit
Strategy
The auditor
should establish the overall audit
strategy for the
audit.
The overall audit
strategy
· sets
the scope, timing
and
direction
of
the audit, and
· guides
the development of the more
detailed
audit plan
The
establishment of the overall audit strategy
involves:
(a)
Determining
the characteristics of the
engagement that define
its scope, such as
the
financial
reporting framework used,
industry-specific reporting requirements
and the locations of the
components
of the entity;
(b)
Ascertaining
the reporting objectives of
the engagement to plan
the timing of the
audit
and
the nature of the communications
required, such as:
deadlines
for interim and final
reporting, and
key
dates for expected
communications with
management
(c)
Considering
the important factors that
will determine the focus of
the engagement team's
efforts,
such as:
a.
Determination of appropriate materiality
levels,
b.
Preliminary identification of areas
where there may be higher
risks of material
misstatement,
c.
Preliminary identification of
material components and
account balances,
134
Fundamentals
of Auditing ACC 311
VU
d.
Evaluation of whether the auditor
may plan to obtain evidence
regarding the
effectiveness
of internal control, and
e.
Identification of recent
significant entity-specific, industry,
financial reporting or other
relevant
developments.
The overall audit
strategy sets out
clearly,
(a)
The
resources to deploy for
specific audit areas, such
as the use of appropriately
experienced
team members for high
risk areas or the
involvement of experts on
complex
matters;
(b)
The
amount of resources to allocate
to specific audit areas, such as
the number of team
members
assigned to observe the
inventory count at material locations,
the extent of review
of
other auditors' work incase
of group audits, or the audit budget in
hours to allocate to
high
risk areas;
(c)
When to
deploy these resources?, such
as whether at an interim audit stage or
at key cut-
off
dates; and
(d)
How
such resources are managed,
directed and supervised?, such
as when team
briefing
and debriefing meetings are
expected to be held, how
engagement partner
and
manager
reviews are expected to take
place (for example, on-site
or off-site), and whether to
complete
engagement quality control
reviews.
II
The
Audit Plan
Once
the overall audit strategy has been
established the auditor should develop an
audit plan for the
audit in order to
reduce audit risk to an acceptably
low level. Although the
auditor ordinarily
establishes
the overall audit strategy before developing the
detailed audit plan, the two
planning
activities
are not necessarily discrete
or sequential processes but
are closely
inter-related since
changes in
one
may result in consequential
changes to the other.
The audit plan is
more detailed than the overall audit
strategy and
includes:
· The
nature, timing and extent of audit
procedures to be performed by engagement
team
members
in order to obtain sufficient appropriate audit
evidence to reduce audit risk to
an
acceptably
low level.
Documentation of
the audit plan also serves as a
record of the proper planning and
performance of
the
audit procedures that can be reviewed
and approved prior to the
performance of further audit
procedures.
The audit plan
includes:
· A
description of the nature,
timing and extent of planned
risk assessment
procedures
sufficient to
assess the risks of material
misstatement,
· A
description of the nature, timing
and extent of planned further audit
procedures at the
assertion
level for each material
class of transactions, account
balance, and disclosure.
(The
plan
for further audit procedures
reflects the auditor's
decision whether to test the
operating
effectiveness
of controls, and the nature,
timing and extent of planned
substantive
procedures);
and
· Such
other audit procedures required to be
carried out for the
engagement in order to
comply
with ISAs (for example,
seeking direct communication
with the entity's
lawyers).
Planning
for these audit procedures
takes place over the course of
the audit as the audit plan for
the
engagement
develops. For example, planning of
the auditor's risk
assessment procedures
ordinarily
occurs
early in the audit process. However,
planning of the nature, timing and extent
of specific
further
audit procedures depends on the
outcome of those risk
assessment procedures. In
addition,
the
auditor may begin the
execution of further audit procedures
for some classes of
transactions,
account
balances and disclosures before
completing the more detailed audit plan
of all remaining
further
audit procedures.
Changes
to Planning Decisions during the Course
of the Audit
The overall audit
strategy and the audit plan should be
updated and changed as
necessary during the
course
of the audit.
135
Fundamentals
of Auditing ACC 311
VU
Planning
an audit is a continual process throughout the audit
engagement. As a result of
unexpected
events,
changes in conditions, or the audit evidence obtained
from the results of audit procedures,
the
auditor
may need to modify the
overall audit strategy and audit plan,
and thereby the
resulting
planned
nature, timing and extent of
further audit procedures.
Information
may come to the auditor's attention that
differs significantly from the
information
available
when the auditor planned the audit
procedures. For example, the
auditor may obtain audit
evidence
through the performance of
substantive procedures that contradicts
the audit evidence
obtained
with respect to the testing of the
operating effectiveness of controls. In
such circumstances,
the
auditor re-evaluates the planned audit
procedures, based on the
revised consideration of
assessed
risks
at the assertion level for
all or some of the classes of
transactions, account balances
or
disclosures.
Direction,
Supervision and Review (Audit
Program)
The auditor
should plan the nature, timing
and extent of direction and supervision
of engagement
team
members and review of their
work.
The
nature, timing and extent of
the direction and supervision of
engagement team members
and
review
of their work vary depending
on many factors, including:
the
size and complexity of the
entity,
the
area of audit,
the
risks of material misstatement,
and
the
capabilities and competence of
personnel performing the audit
work
As the
assessed risk of material
misstatement increases, a given
area of the audit, the auditor
ordinarily
increases
the extent and timeliness of direction
and supervision of engagement
team members and
performs
a more detailed review of
their work.
Documentation
The auditor
should document the overall audit
strategy and the audit plan,
including any significant
changes
made during the audit
engagement.
The
auditor's documentation of the overall audit
strategy records the key
decisions considered
necessary
to properly plan the audit and to
communicate significant matters to the
engagement team.
For
example, the auditor may
summarize the overall audit strategy in
the form of a memorandum
that
contains
key decisions regarding the
overall scope, timing and
conduct of the audit.
The
auditor's documentation of the audit plan
is sufficient to demonstrate the planned
nature, timing
and
extent of risk assessment procedures,
and further audit procedures at
the assertion level for
each
material
class of transaction, account
balance, and disclosure in
response to the assessed
risks.
The
auditor may use standard
audit programs or audit
completion checklists. However,
when such standard
programs
or checklists are used, the
auditor appropriately tailors them to
reflect the
particular
engagement
circumstances.
The
auditor's documentation of any
significant changes to the originally
planned overall audit strategy
and to
the detailed audit plan includes
the reasons for the
significant changes and the
auditor's
response
to the events, conditions, or results of
audit procedures that resulted in such
changes.
For
example, the auditor may significantly
change the planned overall audit strategy
and the audit plan
as a
result of a material business combination
or the identification of a material
misstatement of the
financial
statements. A record of the
significant changes to the overall audit
strategy and the audit
plan,
and resulting changes to the
planned nature, timing and
extent of audit procedures, explains
the
overall
strategy and audit plan finally
adopted for the audit and
demonstrates the appropriate
response
to
significant changes occurring
during the audit.
The
form and extent of documentation
depend on such matters as
the size and complexity of
the
entity,
materiality, the extent of other
documentation, and the
circumstances of the specific
audit
engagement.
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