The Audit Committee Handbook

by ; ; ;
Edition: 5th
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2010-03-22
Publisher(s): Wiley
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Summary

With the current financial meltdown, new guidance from COSO and PCAOB has made audit committees even more accountable in their role of overseeing the audit function. The Audit Committee Handbook, Fifth Edition provides completely updated and expanded guidance on all functions and responsibilities of the audit committee. The Fifth Edition contains the latest regulatory changes that impact audit committees. Audit committee members, auditors, controllers, and board members will benefit from the new guidance on fraud risk and guidance found in this, the most authoritative work on audit committees.

Author Biography

Louis Braiotta, JR., CPA, is a professor of accounting in the School of Management at SUNY Binghamton. During his career, he has worked at Ernst & Ernst (now Ernst & Young). He was the 2002–2003 recipient of the New York State Society of CPAs' Dr. Emanuel Saxe Outstanding CPA in Education Award.

R. Trent Gazzaway is the national managing partner of audit services for Grant Thornton LLP.

Robert H. Colson, PHD, CPA, is a partner in the public policy and external affairs group of Grant Thornton LLP. He is responsible for the firm's engagement with academic researchers and a wide range of policy leaders associated with capital markets, accounting, auditing, financial regulation, and corporate governance.

Sridhar Ramamoorti, PHD, CPA/CITP/CFF, is a Principal with Infogix Advisory Services, Infogix, Inc., a software controls company. Previously, he was a corporate governance partner with Grant Thornton LLP.

Table of Contents

Prefacep. xi
Getting Acquainted with Your Responsibilitiesp. 1
Corporate Accountability: Focus on the Audit Committeep. 3
Appropriate Accounting Skillsp. 4
Internal Control Oversightp. 5
Auditor Oversightp. 6
Audit Committee Resourcesp. 7
Transactional Economicsp. 8
The Nature and Importance of Corporate Accountabilityp. 8
Developments in Corporate Accountabilityp. 12
Corporate Accountability and the Audit Committeep. 32
Conclusionp. 43
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 43
Audit Committees: Basic Roles and Responsibilitiesp. 46
Organization of the Audit Committeep. 47
The Audit Committee Functionsp. 63
The External and Internal Auditing Processp. 82
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 94
The External Users of Financial Reporting Informationp. 97
Introductionp. 97
he Investorsp. 101
Credit Grantorsp. 110
Regulatory Agenciesp. 114
Other Outside Constituenciesp. 121
Important Developments in Business Reporting and Assurance Servicesp. 122
Benchmarkingp. 130
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 131
The Legal Environment of the Audit Committeep. 134
General Legal Responsibilitiesp. 139
Other Federal Provisions Related to Fraudp. 149
Lessons for the Audit Committee from Litigationp. 151
Guidelines for Minimizing Legal Liabilityp. 166
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 170
Rules of the Road: Financial Reports and Their Auditsp. 172
An Overview of U.S. Generally Accepted Auditing Standardsp. 174
An Analysis of the Auditing Standardsp. 176
Integration of Auditing and Related Accounting Standardsp. 179
Attestation Engagementsp. 188
International Auditing Standardsp. 195
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 198
The Planning Function of the Audit Committeep. 201
Planning the External Auditp. 203
Financial Statement Assertionsp. 205
The Relationship between Risk and the External Auditp. 206
The Engagement Teamp. 211
Types of Audit Testsp. 211
Evaluating the External Audit Planp. 215
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 217
Qualitative Factors That May Influence the Determination of Materialityp. 219
Example Audit Planning Schedulep. 221
Planning the Internal Auditp. 224
Components of the Internal Audit Planp. 224
Enterprise Risk Managementp. 227
Oversight and Reportingp. 228
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 229
The Monitoring and Reviewing Functions of the Audit Committeep. 231
Monitoring the System of Internal Controlp. 233
Definition and Basic Conceptsp. 235
Responsibility for the System of Internal Controlp. 238
Reporting Requirementsp. 241
Audit Committee Expectationsp. 245
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 246
Evaluating the Internal and External Audit Functionp. 247
Selecting and Staffing an Internal Audit Functionp. 247
Monitoring the Internal Audit Functionp. 257
Selecting and Evaluating an External Auditorp. 261
Reporting by the External Auditorp. 266
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 267
Communications between Auditors and Audit Committeesp. 269
Audit Committee's Review Objectivep. 269
Accounting Policy Disclosuresp. 272
Guidelines for Reviewing Accounting Policy Disclosuresp. 275
Sourcesand Suggested Readingsp. 278
A Perspective on Fraud and the Auditorp. 279
Meaning of Fraud in a Financial Statement Auditorp. 279
The External Auditor's Responsibilityp. 289
The Internal Auditor's Responsibilityp. 296
Investigating Known Fraudp. 297
The Audit Committee's Oversight Approach to Fraud Risk Assessmentp. 299
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 304
The Audit Committee, Corporate Culture, and Tone at the Topp. 307
Questionable Foreign Paymentsp. 307
Corporate Perquisites and Executive Compensationp. 311
Executive Compensationp. 316
Corporate Contributionsp. 317
Conclusionp. 321
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 324
The Reporting Function and the Audit Committeep. 327
Independent Auditors' Reportsp. 329
The Auditors' Reports on Audited Financial Statementsp. 329
Other Auditing Opinionsp. 334
Other Reports of the Auditorsp. 338
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 345
The Audit Committee's Report and Concluding Observationsp. 346
Purpose of the Audit Committee's Reportp. 347
Guidelines for Preparing the Reportp. 349
Concluding Observationsp. 355
Sources and Suggested Readingsp. 362
Appendixp. 363
Professional Accounting Associations, Business Organizations, Boards, Commissions, and Directors Publicationsp. 363
About the Authorsp. 367
Indexp. 371
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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