The Demand for Audit and Other Assurance Services O ssu a S s Chapter 1 ©2012 Prentice Hall Business Publishing‚ Auditing 14/e‚ Arens/Elder/Beasley Arens/Elder/Beasley 1-1 SarbanesSarbanes-Oxley Act Enron WorldCom The Act established the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board. It also requires auditors to report on the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting. ©2012 Prentice Hall Business Publishing‚ Auditing 14/e‚ Arens/Elder/Beasley Arens/Elder/Beasley 1-2
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case study Here‚ I m going to described Hazard identification process for ABC chemicals. There are some legislation apply in any kind of organisation. Here we are going to describe legislation which are we need to follow in ABC Chemical company. OHS act 2004 Agriculture and vet chemical act 1992 - Dangerous goods Act 1985
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Accounting Education: an international journal Vol. 20‚ No. 2‚ 203– 222‚ April 2011 Adding Value to Audit Education through ‘Living’ Cases JULIE DRAKE University of Huddersfield‚ UK Received: November 2009 Revised: July 2010 Accepted: September 2010 ABSTRACT This paper seeks to address the perceived failure of university teaching to foster critical understanding of audit practice and to identify a potential remedy. It contributes to the debate (Maltby‚ 2001‚ “Second thoughts about ‘Cases in
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Students produce an interview of a character using a 10-question format. 20 Ways of Looking at the Book These activities address multiple intelligences and a range of student ability levels. 91 Ways to Respond to Literature Multiple intelligences‚ varied ability levels‚ traditional to cutting-edge: you’ll find book report ideas here! This list was originally compiled by Anne J. Arvidson. Alternatives to the Traditional Book Report This page lists 70 ideas for responding to reading. Many
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Chapter 3‚ the failures of Stage II standard cost and flexible budgeting systems to provide relevant information about operational improvements and about the costs of organizational processes‚ products‚ and customers. Chapters 4 and 5 dealt with the first major component of Stage III cost systems‚ the systems to provide financial and nonfinancial measurements that will promote employee continuous improvement activities. In this chapter we introduce the innovation of activity-based costing (ABC) as the second
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456 Chapter Eleven Appendix 11B Illustrative Audit Case: Keystone Computers & Networks‚ Inc. Part III: Substantive Tests—Accounts Receivable and Revenue This part of the audit case illustrates the manner in which the auditors design substantive tests of balances. The substantive tests are illustrated for two accounts—receivables and revenue. This aspect of the audit is illustrated with the following audit documentation: • ABC’s risk assessment working paper that combines the auditors’ assessments
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CHAPTER 20 Audit of Cash Balances Copyright 2003 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 20 - 1 What are the auditor’s primary concerns with regard to cash? Copyright 2003 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 20 - 2 What are the auditor’s primary concerns with regard to cash? - existence Copyright 2003 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 20 - 3 What are the auditor’s primary concerns with regard to cash? - existence - completeness Copyright 2003 Pearson Education Canada Inc
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ABSTRACT The ABC analysis is a well known and practical classification of inventory items based on the Pareto principle. The purpose of ABC analysis is to classify the inventory into different groups of A‚ B‚ or C‚ according to importance based on measure of a criterion. Traditionally‚ the classification of inventory into the A‚ B‚ or C categories have generally been based on dollar value per unit multiplied by annual usage rate‚ commonly known as dollar usage. In recent years‚ several multi criteria
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Activity-based costing (ABC) is a costing methodology that identifies activities in an organization and assigns the cost of each activity with resources to all products and services according to the actual consumption by each. This model assigns more indirect costs (overhead) into direct costs compared to conventional costing. Aims of model With ABC‚ a company can soundly estimate the cost elements of entire products ACTIVITIES and services. That may help inform a company’s decision to either: Identify
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Exercises (Group A) (15-20 min.) E 4-22A Req. 1 Plantwide overhead rate = Estimated total manufacturing costs Estimated cost allocation base = = $1‚150‚000 25‚000* direct labor hours = = $46 per direct labor hour *When calculating plantwide overhead rates‚ all direct labor hours incurred in the plant are used. (continued) E 4-22A Req. 2 Departmental overhead rate Machining Dept. overhead rate = = Finishing Dept. overhead rate Total department overhead
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