Audit Sampling Flashcards

(36 cards)

1
Q

What is Audit Sampling?

A

Taking part of a population- subjecting it to audit procedures- projecting results to a population

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2
Q

What are the characteristics of Statistical Sampling?

A

Based on formulas. Helps find an appropriate audit sample. Helps evaluate evidence obtained. Helps evaluate results and quantify Sampling Risk

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3
Q

What are the characteristics of Non-Statistical Sampling?

A

Based on human decision

Equally acceptable as Statistical Sampling

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4
Q

What are the characteristics of Substantive Tests?

A

Variables sampling

Probability proportionate to size sampling

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5
Q

What type of sampling are Control Tests?

A

Attribute Sampling

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6
Q

What is Sampling Risk?

A

Risk that your sample isn’t representative of population

Can happen even if audit is done properly

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7
Q

What is the risk of assessing Control Risk too high?

A

A risk of Control Testing - Auditor works to make Control Risk lower
More substantive tests - Sample overstates Control Risk- Leads to an under-reliance on internal control- over-testing- and overall audit inefficiency
Audit ends up being effective (correct result)- but you do more work

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8
Q

What is the risk of assessing Control Risk too low?

A

A risk of Control Testing - Complement to Confidence Level Inverse relationship to Sample Size
Higher accepted risk of assessing Control Risk too low = Smaller Sample
Lower accepted risk of assessing Control Risk too low = Larger Sample

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9
Q

What are the risks if the auditor concludes controls are operating effectively based on the sample and Control Risk is set too low?

A

Leads to higher Detection Risk - Fewer substantive tests
Sample understates Control Risk
This error leads to over-reliance on internal control- under-testing- and overall audit ineffectiveness.
Does NOT necessarily mean that the Financial Statements are materially misstated - it does mean that if there is one- you are less likely to find it

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10
Q

What is the risk of Incorrect Acceptance?

A

A risk of Substantive Testing - Auditor accepts a balance as fairly stated- when in fact it is not fairly stated
Hurts audit effectiveness
Wrong conclusion reached
Efficient- but not effective

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11
Q

What is the risk of Incorrect Rejection?

A

A risk of Substantive Testing - Auditor rejects balance as fairly stated when in fact it is fairly stated
Hurts audit efficiency
Wrong recommendations given
Effective- but not efficient

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12
Q

What is Non-Sampling Risk?

A

Risk of human (auditor) missing an error

Also called exception- error or deviation.

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13
Q

How does Sampling Risk compare to Non-Sampling Risk?

A

Sampling Risk deals with the chance that your audit sample is flawed
Non-Sampling risk deals with the chance that your human decisions/conclusions are flawed

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14
Q

What is Attribute Sampling?

A

Looking at Control Procedures - Were invoices approved when paid? Errors are stated in terms of %- not dollar amounts
For example- 5 invoices out of 100 were not properly paid. Error rate is 5%
Hint: If you see Error Rate on the Exam- they are referring to Attribute Sampling.

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15
Q

How do you determine if Control Procedures are operating properly or not operating properly?

A

Control Procedures are either operating properly or they are not operating properly - based on Error Rate and the tolerance you have for errors

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16
Q

What is the Tolerable Rate?

A

Error rate in population that you are willing to accept/tolerateInverse relationship to Sample Size
Higher Tolerable Rate = Smaller SampleLower Tolerable Rate = Larger SampleIf you’re willing to accept a higher probability that errors exist- there is less pressure on the sample

17
Q

What is the Expected Population Error Rate?

A

What Error Rate are you expecting? - Judgment call- based on experience
Direct relationship to Sample SizeMore errors = Larger SampleLess errors = Smaller Sample

18
Q

What is the basic premise of Attribute Sampling?

A

Attribute in the sample gives information about the entire audit population
Used to estimate Internal Control error rate

19
Q

For what is the Expected Population Deviation (error) Rate used?

A

Used to determine initial level of Control Risk

20
Q

What is the Allowable Risk of Over-reliance?

A

Risk of Assessing Control Risk too low

Gives you the Sampling Risk

21
Q

When is Attribute sampling used?

A

Attribute sampling is only useful when there is documented evidence (an audit trail) to test
Use when the existence of an error needs to be verified or debunked

22
Q

What is Classic Variable Sampling?

A

Testing for a dollar amount

Value in sample gives information about value in entire population.

23
Q

What functions are used in conjunction with Classic Variable Sampling?

A

Mean Per Unit = Sample Average x Number in PopulationStratification - Decreases effect of variance in population and reduces sample size

24
Q

What are the characteristics of Probability Proportionate to Size (PPS) sampling?

A

A form of Variable SamplingDoes NOT use Standard Deviation

Auditor focuses on a dollar amountLarger or more valuable items get picked more often as part of the sample

25
What is Projected Misstatement?
Misstatement found in sample - have to project it to remainder of population
26
How does Probability Proportionate to Size (PPS) sampling compare to Classic Variables sampling?
PPS:Easier to use- Results in a stratified (homogenous) sample- Results in a smaller sample size to audit- Easy to designClassic Variables Sampling:Easy to expand sample size- Selecting zero and negative balances easy
27
What factors affect sample size?
Tolerable rate for error - Inverse relationship with sample size Risk of assessing Control Risk too low - Inverse relationship with sample size Expected population error rate - Direct relationship with sample size Population size does NOT affect the sample size - as population is larger- sample size doesn't grow.
28
What is the formula for Audit Sampling?
SER + ASR
29
What is Allowance for Sampling Risk?
The amount that you add to the Sampling Error Rate to get some cushion for your sample.As high as you think the population error rate could go based on experience.
30
What is the Tolerable Error Rate?
ess than TER- then accept the Control as effectiveIf population error rate is more than TER- do more testing to get SER lower or conclude control isn't effective. Do more substantive testing
31
What are the steps to develop a sampling plan?
Determine Test Objective - for example- have sales shipments been billed? Define Population and Deviation - take a sample of shipping document- trace forward to see if billed Determine Sample Size based on tolerable rate for error- risk of assessing Control Risk too low- and expected population error rate.Select Sampling Technique
32
After a Sampling Plan is developed- what are the steps in sampling?
Perform the Sampling Plan | Evaluate ResultsDocument Results
33
What is Systematic Sampling?
Every certain # of a population is selected Population needs to be randomly ordered Primary advantage is that population doesn't require pre-numbering
34
What is Sequential Sampling?
Also called Stop or Go sampling | Each audit step determines the next step
35
What is Discovery Sampling?
Audit is testing an area that is so crucial that zero population errors can be tolerated Any phony employees on payroll?
36
How does Block Sampling compare to other sampling methods?
Easy to implement- but is the worst method of sampling.