Chapter 1-Assurance, Auditing and Related Services
Chapter 1-Assurance, Auditing and Related Services
Chapter 1-Assurance, Auditing and Related Services
a. I only
b. II only
c. Both I and II
d. Neither I and II
2. The criteria against which the subject matter of the assurance engagement is to be evaluated or
measured should possess which of the following characteristics?
RELEVANT CONCISE NEUTRAL
a. Yes No Yes
b. No Yes No
c. Yes No No
d. No Yes Yes
3. Criteria that are embodied in laws or regulations, or issued by authorized or recognized bodies
of experts that follow a transparent due process are called
a. Suitable criteria
b. Established criteria
c. Specifically developed criteria
d. General criteria
4. In an assurance engagement, the person or persons, either as individuals or representatives of
entity, responsible for the subject matter is the
a. Intended user
b. Responsible party
c. Professional accountant
d. Client
5. A practitioner’s assurance report contains the following conclusion:
“Based on our work described on this report, nothing has come to our attention that causes us to
believe that internal control is not effective, in all material aspects, based on ABC criteria”
8. PSRE 2400 (Engagements to Review Financial Statements) as amended by the AASC in February
2008, applies to
a. Reviews of any historical financial information of an audit
b. Reviews of any historical financial information by a practitioner other than the entity’s auditor
c. Reviews of any historical financial information or other information by a practitioner other than
the entity’s auditor
d. Reviews of any historical financial information or other information of an audit client
11. An auditor may accept an engagement to perform specific procedures on the specific subject
matter of specified elements, accounts or items of financial statements if
a. The report does not list the procedures performed
b. The financial statements are prepared in accordance with a special purpose framework
c. Use of the report is restricted
d. The auditor is also the entity’s continuing auditor
12. An engagement to perform agreed upon procedures may involve the auditor in performing
certain procedures concerning
I. individual items of financial data
II. a single financial statement
III. A complete set of financial statements
a. I and II only
b. II and III only
c. I and III only
d. I, II and III only
16. The auditor is required to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statement as
a whole are free from material misstatement whether caused by fraud or error. In all cases
when reasonable assurance cannot be obtained, the auditors report should contain a/an
a. Unmodified opinion
b. Qualified or adverse opinion
c. Qualified or disclaimer of opinion
d. Disclaimer of opinion
17. An audit in accordance with the PSAs is performed in the premise that management and, where
appropriate, those charged with governance have responsibilities that are fundamental to the
conduct of the audit. Which of the following is not one those responsibilities?
a. To comply with all relevant PSAs in the preparation and presentation of the entity’s
financial statements.
b. To provide the auditor with all information, such as records and documentation, and other
matters that are relevant to the preparation and presentation of the financial statements.
c. To provide unrestricted access to those within the entity from whom the auditor determines
it necessary to obtain audit evidence.
d. To design, implement, and maintain internal control relevant to the preparation and
presentation of the financial statements that are free from material misstatements whether
cause by fraud or error.
18. Professional judgment
a. Should be exercise in planning and performing an audit of financial statements but need not
be documented
b. Can be used as the justifications for the decisions made by the auditor that are not
supported by the facts and circumstances of the engagement
c. Is necessary in the evaluation of managements’ judgements in applying the entity’s
applicable financial reporting framework
d. Is not used in making decisions about materiality and audit risk
19. Independent auditing can be best described as
a. A branch of accounting
b. A professional activity that measures and communicates financial and business data
c. A discipline which attests to the results of accounting and other functional operations and
data
d. A regulatory function that prevents the issuance of improper financial information
20. Which of the following best describes the reason why an independent auditor reports on
financial statements?
a. A poorly designed internal control system may be in existence
b. Different interests may exist between the company preparing the statements and the
persons using the statements
c. A misstatement of account balances may exist and generally corrected as the result of
independence auditor’s work
d. A management fraud may exist and it is more likely to be detected by independent auditors
21. Which of the following can be significantly affected by a financial statement audit?
a. Business risk
b. Information risk
c. Inherent risk
d. The risk-free interest rate
22. The following statements relate to internal auditing. Which is not correct?
a. Internal auditing is carried out within an entity by employees of the entity or by personnel
contracted for the purpose.
b. Internal auditing has become a function that evaluates and improves an organization’s risk
management, control and governance process to add value to the organization.
c. The internal auditor’s judgements are subordinated to those of management
d. Internal auditing has evolved into a highly professional activity that extends beyond the
appraisal of the efficiency and effectiveness of an entity’s operation
23. Which of the following statements is not true in respect of the internal auditor?
a. The scope of audits performed by the internal auditor is primarily in respect of financial
report audits.
b. An internal auditor does not require a license to practice.
c. Internal auditors are usually employed by companies and government units.
d. Primary responsibility of the internal auditor is to the board of directors.
24. In performing an operational audit, the auditor primarily relies on which of the following
procedures?
a. Physical inspection
b. Analytical procedures
c. Inquiry and observation
d. Tracing and vouching
25. The term “efficiency” in performance auditing refers to
a. Using resources to maximize output for a given input, or to minimize input for any given
quantity and quality of output.
b. The achievement of intended results of operations, programs or activities.
c. The achievement of objectives within a specified time frame.
d. The acquisition of resources at appropriate times and within a specified time frame.
26. What is the proper organizational role of internal auditing?
a. To serve as an independent, objective assurance and consulting activity that adds value to
operations.
b. To assist the external auditor in order to reduce external audit fees.
c. To perform studies to assist in the attainment of more efficient operations.
d. To serve as the investigative arm of the audit committee of the board of directors.
27. Which of the following is considered a primary reason for creating an internal audit
department?
a. To evaluate and improve the effectiveness of control processes.
b. To ensure the accuracy, reliability, and timeliness of financial and operating data used in
management’s decision making.
c. To relieve management of the responsibility for establishing effective controls.
d. To safeguard resources entrusted to the organization.
28. Which of the following actions would be an appropriate response by companies to improve the
public’s perception of their financial reporting?
a. Increased adoption of audit committees
b. Keeping external and internal auditing work separated to maintain independence.
c. Requiring internal auditors to report all significant findings of fraud and illegal activity to the
company president.
d. None of the above.
29. In conducting an appraisal of the economy and efficiency with which company resources are
used, an internal auditor’s responsibility is to
a. Verify the accuracy of asset evaluation
b. Review the reliability of operating information
c. Verify the existence of assets
d. Determine whether operating standards have been established
30. Internal auditors should review the means of physically safeguarding the assets from losses
arising from
a. Exposure to the elements
b. Underusage of physical facilities
c. Misapplication of accounting principles
d. Procedures that are not cost justified
31. An objective of performance audit is to determine whether an entity’s
a. Operational information is in accordance with government auditing standards
b. Specific operating units are functioning economically and financially
c. Financial statements present fairly the results of operation
d. Internal control is adequately operating as designed
32. What is the responsibility of an auditor who is engaged to audit the financial statements of a
government entity?
a. Assess control risk with respect to each component of internal control
b. Assume responsibility for assuring that the entity complies with applicable laws and
regulations
c. Obtain an understanding of the possible financial statement effects of laws and
regulations having direct and material effects on amount reported
d. Design the audit to provide reasonable assurance that the statements are free from material
misstatements resulting from illegal acts having direct or indirect effects.
6. What threat to independence is created when the litigation support services provided to an
audit client include the estimation of the possible outcome and thereby affects the amounts or
disclosures to be reflected in the financial statements?
a. Self review threat
b. Advocacy threat
c. Intimidation threat
d. Familiarity threat
7. The recruitment of senior management for an audit client may create the following future or
current threats to independence, except
a. Self interest threat
b. Advocacy threat
c. Intimidation threat
d. Familiarity threat
8. Janus De Belen, CPA, was offered the engagement to audit the financial statements of Cobra Co.
for the year ended December 31, 2015. Janus had served as a director of Cobra Co. until
December 31, 2013 and his spouse currently own 1,000 of 200,000 outstanding shares of Cobra.
Janus disassociated from Cobra prior to being offered the engagement. Moreover, the
engagement does not cover any period that includes Janus association or employment with
Cobra. Under the Code of Ethics, Janus should
a. Decline the engagement because of his spouse’s stock ownership
b. Accept the engagement
c. Decline the engagement because he had served as a director
d. Accept the engagement because his spouse’s stock ownership is an indirect financial interest
9. A client company has not paid its 20X5 audit fees. According to the Code of Professional Ethics,
in order for the auditor to be considered independent with respect to 20X6 audit, the 20X5
audit fees must be paid before
a. 20X5 report is issued
b. 20X6 fieldworks is started
c. 20X6 report is issued
d. 20X7 fieldwork is started
11. As define in the Code of Ethics, _________________ is the communication to the public of facts
about professional accountants which are not designed for the deliberate promotion of that
professional accountants.
a. Advertising
b. Publicity
c. solicitation
d. Marketing professional services
13. The statement “Quality control policies and procedures should be relevant, adequate, effective
and complied with” is most closely associated with what quality control element?
a. Engagement performance
b. Leadership responsibilities for quality within the firm
c. Monitoring
d. Relevant ethical requirements
14. The implementation of quality control procedures that are applicable to the individual
engagement is the responsibility of the
a. CPA firm
b. Engagement quality control reviewer
c. Engagement team
d. Expert contracted by the firm in connection with the audit engagement
15. Fraud involving one or more members of management or those charged with governance is
referred to as
a. Management fraud
b. Employee fraud
c. Fraudulent financial reporting
d. Misappropriation of assets
17. When planning the audit, the auditor should make inquiries of management. Such inquiries
should address the following, except
a. Management’s assessment of the risk that the financial statements may be misstated due to
fraud
b. Management’s process for identifying and responding to the risk of fraud in the entity
c. Management’s consideration of how an element of unpredictability will be incorporated into
the nature, timing, and extent of the audit procedures to be performed
d. Management’s communication, if any, to those charged with governance regarding its processes
for identifying and responding to the risk of fraud in the entity
18. The following statements relate to communication f misstatements resulting from fraud to
management and to those charged with governance. Which is false?
a. The auditor not need bring to the attention of those charged with governance any material
weaknesses in internal control related to the prevention and detection of fraud
b. If the auditor has identified fraud, whether or not it results in a material misstatements in the
financial statements, the auditor should communicate these matters to the appropriate level of
management on a timely basis, and consider the need to report such matters to those charged
with governance.
c. If the auditor has obtained evidence that indicates that fraud may exist(even if the potential
effect on the financial statements would not be material), the auditor should not communicate
these matters to the appropriate level of management on a timely basis, and consider the need
report such matters to those charged with governance
d. The auditor’s communication with those charged with governance may be made orally or in
writing.
19. Which of the following matters will an auditor most likely communicate those charged with
governance?
a. The level of responsibility assumed by management for the preparation of the financial
statements
b. The effects of significant accounting policies adopted by management in emerging areas for
which there is no authoritative guidance
c. A list of negative trends that may lead to working capital deficiencies and adverse financial ratios
d. Difficulties encountered in achieving a satisfactory response rate from the entity’s customers in
confirming accounts receivables.
1. Which of the following factors most likely would cause an auditor to decline a new audit
engagement?
a. Concluding the entity’s management probably lacks integrity.
b. An inability to perform preliminary analytical procedures before assessing control risk.
c. An inadequate understanding of the entity’s internal control
d. The close proximity to the end of the entity’s reporting period.
4. The auditor shall agree the terms of the audit engagement with management or those charged
with governance, as appropriate. The agreed terms shall be recorded in a/an
a. Engagement letter
b. Letter of audit inquiry
c. Management representation letter
d. Confirmation letter
5. The following matters are generally included in an auditor’s engagement letter, except
a. The factors to be considered in determining the overall materiality
b. The fact that because of the test nature and other inherent limitations of internal control, there
is an unavoidable risk that even some material misstatements may remain undiscovered
c. The scope of the audit
d. Management’s responsibility for the financial statements
7. The auditor of a parent entity is also the auditor of its component. Which of the following
factors may influence the auditor’s decision whether to send a separate engagement letter to
the entity’s component?
a. Whether a separate auditor’s report is to be issued on the component
b. The components management does not accept its responsibilities that are fundamental to the
conduct of an audit
c. The financial reporting framework used by the component is unacceptable
d. The preconditions for an audit of the component’s financial statements are not present
1. Audit evidence is a information used to draw reasonable conclusions on which to base the
auditors opinion. Audit evidence is obtained by performing
I. RIsk assessment procedures
II. Further audit procedures
a. Both I or II
b. either I nor II
c. I only
d. II only
2. Which of the following statements that relates to audit evidence is correct?
a. An audit usually involves the authentication of documentation
b. A given set of procedures may provide audit evidence that is relevant to certain assertions,
but not others.
c. Audit evidence obtained from independent external source is always reliable
d. An entity’s accounting records can be sufficient audit evidence to support the financial
statements
5. The primary difference of an audit of balance sheet and an audit of income statement is that the
audit of income statements addresses the verification of
a. Cutoffs
b. Transactions
c. Authorizations
d. Costs
6. Which of the following forms of documentary evidence would be considered the most reliable
by an auditor?
a. Internally generated prenumbered
b. Easily duplicate
c. Prenumbered
d. Authorized by a responsible official
7. Which of the following elements ultimately determines the specific auditing procedures that are
necessary in the circumstances to affoed a reasonable basis for an opinion?
a. Materiality
b. Audit risk
c. Audit judgement
d. Reasonable assurance
9. Which of the following might be detected by an auditor’s review of the entity’s sales cutoff?
a. Inflated sales for the year
b. Lapping of yearend accounts receivable
c. Unrecorded sales discounts
d. Excessive goods returned for credit
10. Cutoff tests designed to detect credit sales made before end of the year that have been
recorded in the subsequent year provided assurance about managements assertion of
a. Accuracy
b. Classification
c. Rights and obligations
d. Cutoff
11. An auditor most likely limit substantive audit test of sales transaction when control risk is
assessed as low for the occurrence assertion concerning sales transaction and the auditor has
already gathered evidences supporting
a. Beginning and ending inventory balances
b. Cash receipts and accounts receivable
c. Cutoffs of sales and purchases
d. Shipping and receiving activities
12. When using confirmations to provide evidence about the completeness assertion for accounts
payable, appropriate population most likely is
a. Amounts recorded in the accounts payable subsidiary ledger
b. Vendors with whom the entity has previously done business
c. Invoices filed on the entity’s pen invoice file
d. Payees of checks drawn in the month subsequent to the balance sheet date.
4. When performing test of controls and test of transactions for sales, the auditor generally defines
the population as
a. All accounts receivable transactions for the year
b. All sales invoices for the year
c. All cash receipts transaction for the year
d. All sales invoice less sales return credit memos
5. Because of the importance of tests of controls and substantive test of transactions for
acquisition and cash disbursements, it is common in this area to use
a. Block sampling
b. Variables sampling
c. Attributes sampling
d. Probability proportional to the size sampling
7. A proof of cash is not useful in discovering differences in the actual and reported cash balances
due to
a. Deposit in transit
b. Collections on the company’s behalf by the bank which are deposited directly to the company’s
account
c. Cash receipt that were not recorded in the relevant journals
d. Service charges
9. Two overriding considerations affect the many ways an auditor can accumulate evidence:
I. Sufficient appropriate evidence must be accumulated to meet auditor’s professional
responsibility.
II. Cost of accumulating evidence should be minimized
11. Application controls vary across the IT system. To gain an understanding of internal control for a
private company, the auditor must evaluate the application controls every
a. Audit area
b. Material audit area
c. Audit area in which the client uses the computer
d. Audit area where the auditor plans to reduce assessed control risk.
12. Which of the following types of procedures will be performed in an audit of internal control over
financing reporting?
Procedures to obtain an
Understanding of internal control Ratio Analysis
a. Yes Yes
b. No No
c. Yes No
d. No Yes
a. 1,3,2,4,5
b. 4,3,1,2,5
c. 4,3,5,2,1
d. 1,2,3,4,5
15. If the client fails to record disposals of property, plant, and equipment both the original cost of
the asset account and the net book value will be incorrect.
a. Both will be overstated indefinitely
b. The original cost will be overstated indefinitely, and the net book value will be overstated
until the asset is fully depreciated
c. The original cost will be overstated indefinitely and the net book value will be understated
indefinitely
d. The original cost will be overstated indefinitely, and the net book value will be understated until
the asset is fully depreciated