Referat Control Risk And Weakness
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Control Risk and Weakness
The need for controls is determined by asking whether the controls would
reduce the organization’s exposure to net financial loss. Any
situation in which the installation of controls would create potential
savings is called a control risk. (Of course, accounting and processing
controls cannot always create actual savings.) When the implementation
of controls would, on the average, create savings greater than their
costs, then the risk is also a control weakness. Thus, a control
weakness is any control risk in which the excepted savings exceed the
expected installation and operating cost of the control, since by
definition a weakness is cost-effectively correctable. All control
weakness should be corrected by implementing controls. If analysis shows
that a risk cannot be corrected cost-effectively because the cost of the
required procedures would exceed the potential savings, the organization
should protect itself by acquiring insurance against risks or by
avoiding the situation that causes the risk. Figure 1 illustrates these
points logically.
Figure 1 Management Strategy for Control Risk and Weakness
The basic characteristic of a weakness is that it can be corrected
cost-effectively by means of appropriate controls
Control risk
exists
Buy
insurance
No problem; Must
no controls or carry risk
insurance needed alone
Objectives of Controls on Processing
Accounting controls, like other controls, consist of objective,
preventive, feedback, and comparative follow-up elements. More
specifically, the objective, the excepted result (specified as a
preventive measure), the actual result (specified as a feedback
measure), and the follow-up form the backbone of accounting controls.
They provide assurance that accounting processing meets four major
objectives:
Authorization: approval for a transaction to take place; the control
objective is to ensure that all transactions are authorized.
Recording: creating a documentary or computer record of the data in a
transaction; the control objective is to ensure that all transactions
are recorded.
Access: the use of assets, including production, processing, and
transfer to an outside party; the control objective is to allow access
to assets only for authorized purpose and to record access whenever it
occurs.
Asset accountability: having accounting records that describe the
organization’s assets; the control objective is to ensure that
accounting records describe only real assets and describe all of them.
Specific controls must be designed to achieve each
of these objectives. Control success depends on intelligent design and
use. Most procedures that serve accounting control objectives can be
incorporated into the internal structure of hardware, software, and
administrative routines.
A lot of latitude is possible in designing procedure to meet each
objective. However, each procedure must be related to one or more
objectives by specifying (1) a statement of the planned or excepted
result; (2) a method for measuring the actual result; and (3)
recommended follow-up procedures, including comparison of expected and
actual results. Procedures that support the respective objectives
include the following:
Objective 1: Authorization Designate appropriate individuals to-
Set policies and procedures
Approve transaction
Set asset valuations
Authorize policy exceptions
Follow up to ensure policies and procedures work as intended
Follow up reported information that requires a response
Objective 2: Recording Ensure that all transactions
are-
Real
Recorded in all appropriate accounting records
Properly valued and classified
Recorded in a timely way
Summarized and posted correctly
Objective 3: Access Ensure that all tasks involving
access to assets or records are-
Appropriately segregated so that the authorization, the process, and the
associated record keeping are performed by different individuals
Documented to delineate applicable policies and procedures
Performed by competent, properly trained people
Recorded pursuant ton applicable policy and procedures
Protected from unauthorized access
Objective 4: Asset accountability Ensure that all asset records
are-
Prepared according to authorized policies and procedures
Protected from unauthorized access
In agreement with supporting records; for examples, that the control
account agrees with the total of the subsidiary ledger
Recorded in agreement with recent evidence from other entities (such as
accounts receivable confirmations)
Recorded in agreement with physical examination of assets
Above and beyond these accounting controls, data processing controls
should ensure that transaction processing outputs are produced by the
budgeted inputs, that is, that data processing is operationally
efficient.
Bibliography :
1.ACCOUTING INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Edward Lee Summers Ph.D., CPA
Arthur Young Professor of Accounting
The University of Texas at Austin
Start
Does a situation exist in which management objectives might not be met
No
Yes
Would the savings from controls exceed the cost of controls ?
No
Can insurance be bought?
No
Yes
Yes
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