Chapter 5: Fraud, Internal Control, and Cash
internal accounting report
an _____________________ is prepared to compare the company's cash records with the bank's
Fraud
an attempt to deceive others for personal gain
bank reconciliation
an internal report prepared to verify the accuracy of both the bank statement and the cash accounts of a business or individual -provides independent verification of all cash transactions that the bank has processed for the company -done monthly
establish responsibility
assign each task to only one employee; ex) give a separate cash register drawer to each cashier at the beginning of a shift
information and communication
communicates information about activities effecting the organization to support sound decision making
independently verifying
company accountants can use the statement of account prepared by the bank to double-check the accuracy of the cash records
5 control components
control environment, risk assessment, control activities, information and communication, and monitoring activities
3 Categories of employee fraud
corruption, asset misappropriation, financial statement fraud
requirements introduced by SOX:
counteract incentives, reduce opportunities, encourage honesty
restrict access
do not provide access to assets or information unless it is needed to fulfill assigned responsibilities ex) use passwords and firewalls. restrict access to cash
incentive
employee has reason for committing fraud. ex) personal financial pressure
rationalization
employee perceives the misdeed as unavoidable or justified
sox requires all public companies to:
establish an audit committee of independent directors; evaluate and report the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting
5 key principles of internal control
establish responsibility, segregation of duties, restrict access, document procedures, independently verify
monitoring activities
evaluated often to determine if working as intended
2 ways businesses can receive cash:
in person at time of sale or on account
3 components of fraud triangle
incentive, opportunity, rationalization
control activities
include various work responsibilities and duties completed by employees to reduce risks to an acceptable level
reduce opportunities
internal control evaluation, independent audit committee
financial statement fraud
involves misrepresenting amounts in the financial statements, usually to portray more favorable financial results than what actual exist
corruption
involves misusing one's position for inappropriate personal gain
restricting access
keep limited amount of cash on hand to prevent stolen or misplaced cash
document procedures
prepare documents to show activities that have occurred; ex) pay suppliers using prenumbered checks
cash equivalents
short term, highly liquid investments purchased within 3 months of maturity
imprest system
-a process that is controls the amount paid to others by limiting the total amount of money available for making payments to others -reduces risk of under/over payment -it is correct if net balance at the end is equal to zero
to prepare bank reconciliation
1. identify the deposits in transit 2. identify outstanding checks 3. record other transactions on the bank statement and correct your errors a. interest received b. EFT c. NSF check d. service charges e. Your company errors
2 reasons you can never completely prevent or detect fraud
1. organization will implement internal controls only to the extent that their benefits exceed their cost 2. internal controls can fail as a result of human error or fraud
Cash received in person: Cashier
1. scans items sold 2. collects customer payment 3. prepares cash count sheet
most cash payments involve:
1. writing a check or completing EFT to supplier 2. paying employees via EFT 3. a petty cash system (only in rare cases)
Cash received in person: supervisor
4. compares cash in register with cash count sheet 5. stores cash in vault box 6. completes bank deposit
Cash received in person: accounting department
7. compares cash register records with cash count sheet and bank deposit slip 8. prepares journal entry
eliminates
EFT _____________ for some internal controls
debit, credit
EFT--> ______ cash and __________ accounts receivable for each customer
voucher system:
a process for approving and documenting all purchases and payments on account
Petty Cash System
a set of policies, procedures, controls, and forms that a company uses to dispense cash for various miscellaneous needs, such as office supplies and services
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX)
a set of regulations passed by congress in 2002 in an attempt to improve financial reporting and restore investor confidence
petty cash funds
a system used to reimburse employees for expenditures on behalf of the organization
internal control
actions taken to promote efficient and effective operations, protect assets, enhance accounting information, and adhere to laws and regulations
banks point of view
bank statement is presented from ______________
documenting procedures
by processing payments, banks facilitate and document business transactions
cleared the bank
check has ___________ when one bank contacts another and the withdrawal and transfer is complete
independently verify
check others work; ex) compare the cash balance in the companies accounting records to the cash balance reported by the bank and accounting for any differences.
segregate duties
designed into the accounting system to prevent an employee from making a mistake or committing a dishonest act as part of one assigned duty and then also covering it up through another assigned duty; ex) inventory suppliers do not also approve payments to suppliers
risk assessment
managers should continuously assess the potential for fraud
restricted cash
not available for general use but rather restricted for a specific purpose
control environment
refers to the attitude that people in the organization hold regarding internal control
3 controls from bank procedures
restricting access, documenting procedures, independently verifying
loan covenant
terms of a loan agreement that if broken, entitle the lender to renegotiate loan terms or force repayment
asset misappropriation
theft (embezzlement); cash is usually the target, but other assets can be misappropriated
counteract incentives
those who willfully misrepresent financial results face stiff penalties (fines) ad prison terms
the primary goal for cash receipts
to endure that the business receives the appropriate amount of cash and safely deposits it in the bank
the primary goal of internal controls for all cash payments
to ensure that the business pays only for properly authorized transactions
opportunity
usually steam from weak external controls
electronic funds transfer (EFT)
when customer electronically transfers funds from his or her bank account to the company's bank account
direct deposit
when employees are paid salaries and wages through EFT