Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
TRUE/FALSE
1. The ethical principle of justice asserts that the benefits of the decision should be distributed fairly to
those who share the risks.
ANS: T
2. The ethical principle of informed consent suggests that the decision should be implemented so as to
minimize all of the risks and to avoid any unnecessary risks.
ANS: F
3. Employees should be made aware of the firms commitment to ethics.
ANS: T
4. Business ethics is the analysis of the nature and social impact of computer technology, and the
corresponding formulation and justification of policies for the ethical use of such technology.
ANS: F
5. Para computer ethics is the exposure to stories and reports found in the popular media regarding the
good or bad ramifications of computer technology.
ANS: F
6. Source code is an example of intellectual property.
ANS: T
7. Copyright laws and computer industry standards have been developed jointly and rarely conflict.
ANS: F
8. Business bankruptcy cases always involve fraudulent behavior.
ANS: F
9. Defalcation is another word for financial fraud.
ANS: T
10. The trend toward distributed data processing increases the exposure to fraud from remote locations.
ANS: T
11. The external auditor is responsible for establishing and maintaining the internal control system.
ANS: F
24. Section 302 requires the management of public companies to assess and formally report on the
effectiveness of their organizations internal controls.
ANS: F
25. The objective of SAS 99 is to seamlessly blend the auditors consideration of fraud into all phases of
the audit process.
ANS: T
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Which ethical principle states that the benefit from a decision must outweigh the risks, and that there is
no alternative decision that provides the same or greater benefit with less risk?
a. minimize risk
b. justice
c. informed consent
d. proportionality
ANS: D
2. Individuals who acquire some level of skill and knowledge in the field of computer ethics are involved
in which level of computer ethics?
a. para computer ethics
b. pop computer ethics
c. theoretical computer ethics
d. practical computer ethics
ANS: A
3. All of the following are issues of computer security except
a. releasing incorrect data to authorized individuals
b. permitting computer operators unlimited access to the computer room
c. permitting access to data by unauthorized individuals
d. providing correct data to unauthorized individuals
ANS: B
4. Which characteristic is not associated with software as intellectual property?
a. uniqueness of the product
b. possibility of exact replication
c. automated monitoring to detect intruders
d. ease of dissemination
ANS: C
5. For an action to be called fraudulent, all of the following conditions are required except
a. poor judgment
b. false representation
c. intent to deceive
d. injury or loss
ANS: A
6. One characteristic of employee fraud is that the fraud
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANS: C
7. Forces which may permit fraud to occur do not include
a. a gambling addiction
b. lack of segregation of duties
c. centralized decision making environment
d. questionable integrity of employees
ANS: C
8. Which of the following best describes lapping?
a. applying cash receipts to a different customers account in an attempt to conceal previous
thefts of funds
b. inflating bank balances by transferring money among different bank accounts
c. expensing an asset that has been stolen
d. creating a false transaction
ANS: A
9. Operations fraud includes
a. altering program logic to cause the application to process data incorrectly
b. misusing the firms computer resources
c. destroying or corrupting a programs logic using a computer virus
d. creating illegal programs that can access data files to alter, delete, or insert values
ANS: B
10. Who is responsible for establishing and maintaining the internal control system?
a. the internal auditor
b. the accountant
c. management
d. the external auditor
ANS: C
11. The concept of reasonable assurance suggests that
a. the cost of an internal control should be less than the benefit it provides
b. a well-designed system of internal controls will detect all fraudulent activity
c. the objectives achieved by an internal control system vary depending on the data
processing method
d. the effectiveness of internal controls is a function of the industry environment
ANS: A
12. Which of the following is not a limitation of the internal control system?
a. errors are made due to employee fatigue
b. fraud occurs because of collusion between two employees
c. the industry is inherently risky
d. management instructs the bookkeeper to make fraudulent journal entries
ANS: C
ANS: C
20. Which of the following suggests a weakness in the internal control environment?
a. the firm has an up-to-date organizational chart
b. monthly reports comparing actual performance to budget are distributed to managers
c. performance evaluations are prepared every three years
d. the audit committee meets quarterly with the external auditors
ANS: C
21. Which of the following indicates a strong internal control environment?
a. the internal audit group reports to the audit committee of the board of directors
b. there is no segregation of duties between organization functions
c. there are questions about the integrity of management
d. adverse business conditions exist in the industry
ANS: A
22. According to SAS 78, an effective accounting system performs all of the following except
a. identifies and records all valid financial transactions
b. records financial transactions in the appropriate accounting period
c. separates the duties of data entry and report generation
d. records all financial transactions promptly
ANS: C
23. Which of the following is the best reason to separate duties in a manual system?
a. to avoid collusion between the programmer and the computer operator
b. to ensure that supervision is not required
c. to prevent the record keeper from authorizing transactions
d. to enable the firm to function more efficiently
ANS: C
24. Segregation of duties in the computer-based information system includes
a. separating the programmer from the computer operator
b. preventing management override
c. separating the inventory process from the billing process
d. performing independent verifications by the computer operator
ANS: A
25. Which of the following is not an internal control procedure?
a. authorization
b. managements operating style
c. independent verification
d. accounting records
ANS: B
26. The decision to extend credit beyond the normal credit limit is an example of
a. independent verification
b. authorization
c. segregation of functions
d. supervision
ANS: B
27. When duties cannot be segregated, the most important internal control procedure is
a. supervision
b. independent verification
c. access controls
d. accounting records
ANS: A
28. An accounting system that maintains an adequate audit trail is implementing which internal control
procedure?
a. access controls
b. segregation of functions
c. independent verification
d. accounting records
ANS: D
29. Employee fraud involves three steps. Of the following, which is not involved?
a. concealing the crime to avoid detection
b. stealing something of value
c. misstating financial statements
d. converting the asset to a usable form
ANS: C
30. Which of the following is not an example of independent verification?
a. comparing fixed assets on hand to the accounting records
b. performing a bank reconciliation
c. comparing the accounts payable subsidiary ledger to the control account
d. permitting authorized users only to access the accounting system
ANS: D
31. The importance to the accounting profession of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977 is that
a. bribery will be eliminated
b. management will not override the companys internal controls
c. firms are required to have an effective internal control system
d. firms will not be exposed to lawsuits
ANS: C
32. The board of directors consists entirely of personal friends of the chief executive officer. This indicates
a weakness in
a. the accounting system
b. the control environment
c. control procedures
d. this is not a weakness
ANS: B
33. Computer fraud can take on many forms, including each of the following except
a. theft or illegal use of computer-readable information
b. theft, misuse, or misappropriation of computer equipment
c. theft, misuse, or misappropriation of assets by altering computer-readable records and files
a.
b.
c.
d.
ANS: D
41. Management can expect various benefits to follow from implementing a system of strong internal
control. Which of the following benefits is least likely to occur?
a. reduced cost of an external audit.
b. prevents employee collusion to commit fraud.
c. availability of reliable data for decision-making purposes.
d. some assurance of compliance with the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977.
e. some assurance that important documents and records are protected.
ANS: B
42. Which of the following situations is not a segregation of duties violation?
a. The treasurer has the authority to sign checks but gives the signature block to the assistant
treasurer to run the check-signing machine.
b. The warehouse clerk, who has the custodial responsibility over inventory in the warehouse,
selects the vendor and authorizes purchases when inventories are low.
c. The sales manager has the responsibility to approve credit and the authority to write off
accounts.
d. The department time clerk is given the undistributed payroll checks to mail to absent
employees.
e. The accounting clerk who shares the record keeping responsibility for the accounts
receivable subsidiary ledger performs the monthly reconciliation of the subsidiary ledger
and the control account.
ANS: B
43. Which of the following is not an issue to be addressed in a business code of ethics required by the
SEC?
a. Conflicts of interest
b. Full and Fair Disclosures
c. Legal Compliance
d. Internal Reporting of Code Violations
e. All of the above are issues to be addressed
ANS: E
SHORT ANSWER
1. What are the main issues to be addressed in a business code of ethics required by the SEC?
ANS:
Conflicts of interest, Full and Fair Disclosures, Legal Compliance, Internal Reporting of Code
Violations, Accountability
2. List the four broad objectives of the internal control system.
ANS:
safeguard assets,
Preventive
Detective
b.
Preventive
Detective
c.
Preventive
Detective
d.
Preventive
Detective
e.
counting inventory
Preventive
Detective
ANS:
A. preventive; B. detective; C. preventive; D. detective; E. detective
Use the internal control procedures listed below to complete the statements.
segregation of duties
general authorization
access controls
supervision
specific authorization
accounting records
independent verification
7. A clerk reorders 250 items when the inventory falls below 25 items. This is an example of
__________________________.
ANS:
general authorization
8. The internal audit department recalculates payroll for several employees each pay period. This is an
example of __________________________.
ANS:
independent verification
18. The text discusses many questions about personal traits of employees which might help uncover
fraudulent activity. What are three?
ANS:
executives: with high personal debt, living beyond their means, engaged in habitual gambling, appear
to abuse alcohol or drugs, appear to lack personal codes of ethics, appear to be unstable
19. Give two examples of employee fraud and explain how the theft might occur.
ANS:
Charges to expense accounts: Cash could be stolen and charged to a miscellaneous expense account.
Once the account is closed, detection would be more difficult.
Lapping: This involves converting cash receipts to personal use. If a customers check is taken, his/her
balance will not reflect a payment and will be detected when a statement is sent. In order to conceal
this fraud, a later payment is used to cover the stolen check. This is in effect a small scale Ponzi
scheme.
20. What are the six broad classes of physical control activities defined by SAS 78?
ANS:
Transaction authorization, segregation of duties, supervision, access controls, accounting records,
independent verification
ESSAY
1. The text describes six internal control activities. List four of them and provide a specific example of
each one.
ANS:
Control Activity
Authorization
Example
general (purchase of inventory when level drops) or specific
(credit approval beyond normal limit)
Segregation of functions
Supervision
Accounting records
Access controls
Independent verification
3. Discuss the importance of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977 to the accounting profession.
ANS:
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977 (FCPA) is a law that requires all companies registered with
the Securities and Exchange Commission to:
keep records that fairly and reasonably reflect the transactions of the firm and its financial position
maintain a system of internal control that provides reasonable assurance that the organizations
objectives are met
As a result of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977, management devotes substantial time to
developing and maintaining the internal control structure because failure to do so violates the FCPA
and could lead to heavy fines and imprisonment.
Accountants are key participants in establishing and maintaining the internal control structure.
Therefore, it is accountants who are instrumental in ensuring that the firm is in compliance with the
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977.
4. Why are the computer ethics issues of privacy, security, and property ownership of interest to
accountants?
ANS:
Privacy is a concern because the nature of computer data files makes it possible for unauthorized
individuals to obtain information without it being recognized as missing from its original location.
Security is a concern because its absence makes control from a privacy viewpoint questionable. In
addition lack of security may permit unauthorized changes to data, therefore distorting information
that is reported.
Property ownership raises issues of legitimacy of organizational software, valuation of assets, and
questions of lost revenues.
5. According to common law, there are five conditions that must be present for an act to be deemed
fraudulent. Name and explain each.
ANS:
In order for an act to be deemed fraudulent under common law, it must possess the following
characteristics:
false representation, meaning some misrepresentation or omission must have occurred,
material facts, meaning that the facts must influence someones actions,
intent, meaning there must have been the intention to deceive others,
justifiable reliance, meaning it did affect someones decision, and
injury or loss must have occurred.
6. Management fraud is regarded as more serious than employee fraud. Three special characteristics have
been discussed for management fraud. What are they? Explain.
ANS:
It usually occurs at levels above the normal internal control system.
There is typically an intent to present a better picture of the business than is valid, often to deceive
creditors and/or shareholders.
If assets are misappropriated, the route is quite devious involving a maze of business transactions.
7. Four principal types of corruption are discussed. Name all four and explain at least two.
ANS:
Corruption involves an executive, manager, or employee of a business working in collusion with an
outsider. The four principal types of corruption are: bribery, illegal gratuities, conflicts of interest, and
economic extortion.
Bribery involves giving, offering, soliciting, or receiving things of value to influence an official in the
performance of his or her lawful duties.
An illegal gratuity involves giving. receiving, offering, or soliciting something of value because of an
official act that has been taken.
A conflict of interest occurs when an employee acts on behalf of a third party during the discharge of
his or her duties or has self-interest in the activity being performed.
Economic extortion is the use (or threat) of force (including economic sanctions) by an individual or
organization to obtain something of value.
8. Misappropriation of assets can involve various schemes: charges to expense accounts, lapping, and
transaction fraud. Explain each and give an example.
ANS:
Charges to expense accounts involve fictitious charges to such accounts as miscellaneous expense to
offset theft of an asset. Because the expense account is closed to revenue at the end of the period, the
period in which it could be detected is short.
Lapping is a technique whereby an early theft is covered up by a later one, i.e., with the moves
lapping over each other. The simplest example involves taking a customers payment. A later
payment is then credited to the first customers account, not the second. And on it goes. This requires
some control over billing to avoid tipping off the last customer.
Transaction fraud involves deleting, altering, or adding false transactions to divert assets to the
perpetrator. For example, if an employee leaves the business and the supervisor fails to notify payroll
and continues to clock the employee in and out, a fraudulent paycheck would be produced. If, in
addition, the supervisor distributes the paycheck, it can be kept, and cashed.
9. Computer fraud is easiest at the data collection stage. Why?
ANS:
Computer fraud is easiest at the data collection stage because much of what occurs after the data
collection or input stage is not visible to human eyes. Once entered, the system will presume that the
input is legitimate and will process it as all others.
10. Explain why collusion between employees and management in the commission of a fraud is difficult to
both prevent and detect.
ANS:
Collusion among employees in the commission of a fraud is difficult to both prevent and detect. This is
particularly true when the collusion is between managers and their subordinate employees.
Management plays a key role in the internal control structure of an organization. They are relied upon
to prevent and detect fraud among their subordinates. When they participate in fraud with the
employees over whom they are supposed to provide oversight, the organizations control structure is
weakened, or completely circumvented, and the company becomes more vulnerable to losses.
11. Since all fraud involves some form of financial misstatement, how is Fraudulent Statement fraud
different?
ANS:
Fraudulent statements are associated with management fraud. While all fraud involves some form of
financial misstatement, to meet the definition under this class of fraud scheme, the statement itself
must bring direct or indirect financial benefit to the perpetrator. In other words, the statement is not
simply a vehicle for obscuring or covering a fraudulent act. For example, misstating the cash account
balance to cover the theft of cash does not fall under this class of fraud scheme. On the other hand,
understating liabilities to present a more favorable financial picture of the organization to drive up
stock prices does qualify.
12. Explain the problems associated with lack of auditor independence.
ANS:
Auditing firms who are also engaged by their clients to perform non-accounting activities such as
actuarial services, internal audit outsourcing services, and consulting lack independence. They are
essentially auditing their own work. This risk is that as auditors they will not bring to managements
attention detected problems that may adversely affect their consulting fees. For example, Enrons
auditors Arthur Andersen were also their internal auditors and their management consultants.
13. Explain the problems associated with lack of director independence
ANS:
Many boards of directors are comprised of individuals who are not independent. Examples of lack of
independence are directors who: have a personal relationship by serving on the boards of other
directors companies; have a business trading relationship as key customers or suppliers of the
company; have a financial relationship as primary stockholders or have received personal loans from
the company; have an operational relationship as employees of the company.
14. Explain the problems associated with Questionable Executive Compensation Schemes
ANS:
A survey by Thompson Financial revealed the strong belief that executives have abused stock-based
compensation. The consensus is that fewer stock options should be offered than currently is the
practice. Excessive use of short-term stock options to compensate directors and executives may result
in short term thinking and strategies aimed at driving up stock prices at the expense of the firms longterm health. In extreme cases, financial statement misrepresentation has been the vehicle to achieve the
stock price needed to exercise the option.
15. Explain the problems associated with inappropriate accounting practices.
ANS:
The use of inappropriate accounting techniques is a characteristic common to many financial statement
fraud schemes. Enron made elaborate use of Special Purpose Entities (SPE) to hide liabilities through
off balance sheet accounting. WorldCom management transferred transmission line costs from current
expense accounts to capital accounts. This allowed them to defer some operating expenses and report
higher earnings. Also, they reduced the book value of hard assets of MCI by $3.4 billion and increased
goodwill by the same amount. Had the assets been left at book value, they would have been charged
against earnings over four years. Goodwill, on the other hand, was amortized over much longer period.
16. Explain the purpose of the PCAOB.
ANS:
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act creates a Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB). The
PCAOB is empowered to set auditing, quality control, and ethics standards, to inspect registered
accounting firms, to conduct investigations, and to take disciplinary actions.
17. Why is an Independent Audit Committee important to a company?
ANS:
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act requires all audit committee members to be independent and requires the
audit committee to hire and oversee the external auditors. This provision is consistent with many
investors who consider the board composition to be a critical investment factor. For example,
Thompson Financial survey revealed that most institutional investors want corporate boards to be
comprised of at least 75% of independent directors
18. What are the key points of the Issuer and Management Disclosure of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act?
ANS:
1. Public companies must report all off balance-sheet transactions.
2. Annual reports filed with the SEC must include a statement by management asserting that it is
responsible for creating and maintaining adequate internal controls and asserting to the
effectiveness of those controls.
3. Officers must certify that the companys accounts fairly present the firms financial condition and
results of operations. Knowingly filing a false certification is a criminal offence.
19. In this age of high technology and computer based information systems, why are accountants
concerned about physical (human) controls?
ANS:
This class of controls relates primarily to the human activities employed in accounting systems. These
activities may be purely manual, such as the physical custody of assets, or they may involve the use of
computers to record transactions or update accounts. Physical controls do not relate to the computer
logic that actually performs these accounting tasks. This is the subject matter of chapter 16. Rather,
they relate to the human activities that initiate such computer logic. In other words, physical controls
do not suggest an environment in which clerks update paper accounts with pen and ink. Virtually all
systems, regardless of their sophistication, employ human activities that need to be controlled.
20. How has the Sarbanes-Oxley Act had a significant impact on corporate governance?
ANS:
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act requires all audit committee members to be independent and requires the
audit committee to hire and oversee the external auditors. This provision is consistent with many
investors who consider the board composition to be a critical investment factor. For example, a
Thomson Financial survey revealed that most institutional investors want corporate boards to be
comprised of at least 75 percent independent directors.
21. Discuss the non accounting services that external auditors are no longer permitted to render to audit
clients under SOX legislation.
ANS:
The Act addresses auditor independence by creating more separation between a firms attestation and
non-auditing activities. This is intended to specify categories of services that a public accounting firm
cannot perform for its client. These include the following nine functions:
Bookkeeping or other services related to the accounting records or financial statements;
Financial information systems design and implementation;
Appraisal or valuation services, fairness opinions, or contribution-in-kind reports;
Actuarial services;
Internal audit outsourcing services;
Management functions or human resources;
Broker or dealer, investment adviser, or investment banking services;
Legal services and expert services unrelated to the audit; and
Any other service that the PCAOB determines is impermissible.
While the Sarbanes-Oxley Act prohibits auditors from providing the above services to their audit
clients, they are not prohibited from performing such services for non-audit clients or privately held
companies.
22. What are the key points of the Issuer and Management Disclosure of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act?
ANS:
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act imposes new corporate disclosure requirements including:
Public companies must report all off-balance-sheet transactions.
Annual reports filed with the SEC must include a statement by management asserting that it is
responsible for creating and maintaining adequate internal controls and asserting to the effectiveness of
those controls.
Officers must certify that the companys accounts fairly present the firms
financial condition and results of operations. Knowingly filing a false certification is a criminal
offence.