Details

Audit and Accountancy Pitfalls


Audit and Accountancy Pitfalls

A Casebook for Practising Accountants, Lawyers and Insurers
1. Aufl.

von: Emile Woolf, Moira Hindson

35,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 06.01.2011
ISBN/EAN: 9780470976432
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 336

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Beschreibungen

<i>Avoiding Audit Pitfalls</i> offers real case studies covering a comprehensive range of challenges and mistakes that any accountant can make during the course of their career. Focusing on everyday mistakes and failures common to auditors in all territories worldwide, the book will cover audit failures that have led to fraud going undetected as well as failure to accurately assess a firm's ability to continue. This book will appeal not only to general accountants and auditors but also to forensic accountant, and students in the field.
<b>Preface.</b> <p><b>1 Introduction.</b></p> <p>1.1 Staying out of trouble.</p> <p>1.2 The forensic accountant's role.</p> <p>1.3 Maintaining impartiality.</p> <p>1.4 The disciplines of expert witness work.</p> <p>1.5 Conduct that is 'reasonably competent'.</p> <p>1.6 The disciplinary arena.</p> <p>1.7 Litigation in the current climate.</p> <p><b>2 Auditors' Failure to Detect Theft, Embezzlement and Financial Crime.</b></p> <p>2.1 Summary of types of fraud.</p> <p>2.2 Introduction.</p> <p>2.3 Auditors' responsibility for fraud detection.</p> <p>2.4 Limiting liability.</p> <p>2.5 Perspectives on fraud – respective responsibilities of management and auditors.</p> <p>2.6 Disclosure of management fraud.</p> <p>2.7 Monitoring the client's regulatory conduct.</p> <p>2.8 Fraud by employees.</p> <p>A. Failure to carry out basic procedures.</p> <p>B. Failure to recognise a client's excessive reliance on a trusted employee.</p> <p>C. General failure to recognise internal control weaknesses.</p> <p>D. Inappropriate delegation of key audit tests.</p> <p>E. Failure to follow up suspicious circumstances.</p> <p>2.9 Using the company as an instrument of fraud by senior management.</p> <p>F. Lack of independence.</p> <p>G. Lack of resources.</p> <p>H. Failure to obtain third party verification.</p> <p>I. Improper reliance on management representations.</p> <p>J. Risks of international affiliations and inappropriate reliance on the work of others.</p> <p>K. Failure of analytical review.</p> <p>L. Lack of awareness of risk.</p> <p>M. The practice ethical problem.</p> <p>N. Would any audit have picked this up?</p> <p>2.10 Summary of key lessons.</p> <p><b>3 Negligent Audit Work Not Involving Theft of Company Assets.</b></p> <p>3.1 Introduction.</p> <p>3.2 Fundamental auditing pitfalls.</p> <p>A. Failure to carry out basic procedures.</p> <p>B. Risks of undertaking work outside the scope of the auditor's expertise.</p> <p>C. Improper reliance on management representations.</p> <p>D. Failure of analytical review.</p> <p>E. Inadequate assessment of going concern.</p> <p>F. Succumbing to client pressure.</p> <p>G. Risks associated with group structures and entities under common control.</p> <p>H. Risks inherent in subcontracting arrangements and joint audits.</p> <p>I. Risks associated with disappointing acquisitions.</p> <p>3.3 Summary of key lessons.</p> <p><b>4 Professional Pitfalls for Accountants.</b></p> <p>4.1 Importance of engagement letters.</p> <p>4.2 Comparison with the USA.</p> <p>4.3 Liability exposure to third parties.</p> <p>A. Preparation of unaudited accounts.</p> <p>B. Preparation of independent reports.</p> <p>C. Counterclaims following pursuit of outstanding fees.</p> <p>D. Dangers of administrative foul-ups.</p> <p>E. Coping with clients whose record-keeping is chaotic.</p> <p>F. Conflicts of interest.</p> <p>G. Unwittingly becoming a shadow director.</p> <p>H. Negligent certification of creditworthiness.</p> <p>I. Vicarious liability following actions of consultants and staff.</p> <p>J. Provision of advice outside the scope of an accountant's expertise.</p> <p>K. Accountants acting as trustees.</p> <p>L. Allegations of negligent valuation.</p> <p>M. The aftermath of disappointing acquisitions.</p> <p>4.4 Summary of key lessons.</p> <p><b>5 Tax Related Claims.</b></p> <p>5.1 Introduction.</p> <p>5.2 Provision of incorrect or inadequate advice.</p> <p>A. Failure properly to investigate a client's circumstances.</p> <p>B. Danger of not keeping abreast of changing circumstances.</p> <p>C. Failure to define responsibility following an engagement.</p> <p>D. Consequences of giving casual advice that proves to be inappropriate.</p> <p>E. Absence of advice may be negligent.</p> <p>F. Danger of giving advice that falls outside one's expertise.</p> <p>5.3 Failed practice administration.</p> <p>G. Failure of accountant to keep records of client contact.</p> <p>H. Failure of internal systems within practice administration.</p> <p>I. Know your partners. . . .</p> <p>J. <i>. . .</i> and your employees!</p> <p>5.4 Summary of key lessons.</p> <p><b>6 The Disciplinary Framework.</b></p> <p>6.1 Introduction.</p> <p>6.2 Structure and procedures.</p> <p>6.3 Costs.</p> <p>A. Conflicts of interest.</p> <p>B. Dangers of introducing clients to third party advisers.</p> <p>C. Dangers of not keeping up to date.</p> <p>D. Non-executive directorships.</p> <p>E. Complaints from official sources.</p> <p>F. How to respond to a formal complaint – the dangers.</p> <p>6.4 Summary of key lessons.</p> <p><b>Appendix: From the archives.</b></p> <p>The astonishing story of the 'salad oil swindle'.</p> <p>The Equity Funding story.</p> <p><b>Glossary.</b></p> <p><b>Index.</b></p>
<p><b>Emile Woolf</b> is a Fellow of the ICAEW, the CCA, the Chartered Institute of Management, and the IIA. He is also a founder member of the Academy of Experts. From 1984 to 2008, he was a partner in Kingston Smith (chartered accountants) with special responsibility for litigation, and has given evidence at trial on over 30 occasions. He is a frequent contributor to the professional press, and has written several books. He is founder of the Emile Woolf Colleges - now one of the largest accountancy training groups in the UK.</p> <p><b>Moira Hindson</b> is Emile Woolf’s successor as Head of Forensic Accounting Services at Kingston Smith. She is a member of the Academy of Experts, the Expert Witness Institute, the Fraud Advisory Panel, and also an associate member of the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners. She has written several articles and has lectured to auditors and accountants on the lessons to be learned from key professional negligence cases.</p>
Auditors and accountants face many challenges as the fallout from the financial crisis continues. Companies and individuals who have incurred losses are likely to turn the spotlight on their financial advisors who failed to keep them out of trouble. The enormous rise in fraud due to the recession will undoubtedly give rise to the age-old cry 'Where were the auditors?' <p><i>Audit and Accountancy Pitfalls</i> is a one-of-a-kind casebook of professional negligence claims against auditors and accountants. Written as a practical reference for accountancy practitioners and their advisors, the authors draw on their personal experiences as expert witnesses, and from insurers' case files to provide a set of real life case studies illustrating the professional challenges facing all accountants and auditors, adding practical guidance on how to manage these situations effectively.</p> <p>Coverage includes:</p> <ul> <li>Claims against auditors for failing to detect fraud</li> <li>Other claims against auditors</li> <li>Claims against accountants</li> <li>Tax related claims</li> <li>Disciplinary actions against accountants</li> </ul> <p>The cases described in this book will provide many salutary warnings to practitioners in virtually every field of accountancy. Although all names have been changed to protect the guilty, the events and outcomes described are real. In each instance the authors set out what went wrong and the lessons to be learned from the mistakes made, making this a thought-provoking read.</p> <p>Written by an author team with over 40 years' collective experience in dealing with litigation in accounting and auditing, <i>Audit and Accountancy Pitfalls</i> will be an indispensable reference for auditors, accountants and anyone involved in claims involving allegations of negligence against professional accountants.</p>

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