Materiality
Materiality
Materiality concept in accounting and auditing refers to the concept that all the material items
should be reported properly in the financial statements.
Material items are considered as those items whose inclusion or exclusion results in significant
changes in the decision making for the users of business information. An item is material if its
omission or misstatement can influence the economic decisions of the users of the information.
Materiality concept also allows for the provision of ignoring other accounting principles if doing so
doesn’t have an impact on the financial statements of the business concerned. Therefore, the
information present in the financial statements must be complete in terms of all material aspects, so
that it is able to present an accurate picture of the business.
The users of financial statements can be shareholders, auditors and investors, etc.
The concept of materiality is fundamental to the entire audit process and is applied by the auditor:
Example of Materiality
A customer who has defaulted in payment of shillings 10,000 to a company that has a net assets of
500 trillion shillings is regarded as immaterial for the company. However, if the default amount is
200 trillion shillings, then it will have an impact on the company and is thus material.
Materiality applies not only to amounts in the financial statements, but also to disclosures that are
non-quantitative. For example, non-disclosure or inadequate disclosure of accounting policy for a
material financial statement area may influence the economic decision of the user of financial
statements.
Materiality is a relative rather than an absolute concept. A misstatement of a given magnitude might
be material for a small company, whereas the error of the same amount could be immaterial for a
large one. For example, an unadjusted misstatement of one billion Uganda shillings on account of
non-provisioning for doubtful debtors will result in material misstatement of financial statements of
a company having a turnover of ten billion Uganda shillings and a net profit of one billion Uganda
shillings. However, the same unadjusted misstatement will not be material to the financial
statements of a company having a turnover of a hundred trillion Uganda shillings and a profit of fifty
trillion Uganda shillings.
1. Relevance: Material information impacts the financial decisions taken by users and is therefore
regarded as relevant to the users of accounting information.
2. Reliability: If a significant piece of information is omitted or misrepresented, it will result in
impairment of users capability to make important decisions based on the financial statements. It will
impact the reliability of the information.
3. Completeness: If the financial statements contain incomplete information, then it will not present
the business information correctly.
The auditor may consider the following illustrative factors in assessing whether an amount is
material:
Compare the magnitude of the item with the overall view presented by the accounts
Compare the magnitude of the item with the same item in previous years
Compare the magnitude of the item with the total of which it forms a part (e.g debtors may
include employee loans but if employee loans become large ie material then the description
debtors may be inadequate)
Consider the presentation and context of the item. Does it affect the true and fair view?
Some items are always material eg director’s remuneration.
The statement on auditing standards requires auditors to consider materiality and its relationship
with audit risk. It points out a number of issues
Types of Materiality
1. Overall Materiality
When establishing the overall audit strategy, the auditor determines materiality for the financial
statements as a whole. It is a threshold, above which, the financial statements would be materially
misstated. This is called “materiality for the financial statements as a whole” or simply overall
materiality.
2. Performance Materiality
Performance Materiality is set at an amount less than the overall materiality and acts like a “safety
buffer” to lower the risk of aggregate uncorrected and undetected misstatements being material for
the overall financial statements. Performance materiality enables the auditor to respond to specific
risk assessments (without changing the overall materiality), and to reduce to an appropriately low
level the probability that the aggregate of uncorrected and undetected misstatements exceeds
overall materiality.
3. Specific Materiality
Specific materiality is established for classes of transactions, account balances, or disclosures where
misstatements of lesser amounts than overall materiality could reasonably be expected to influence
the economic decisions of users, taken on the basis of the financial statements. (For example;
potential investors may be interested in revenue)
Specific performance materiality is the same concept as performance materiality, except that it is set
in relation to specific materiality and not overall materiality.
1 Overall Materiality
Overall materiality is based on the auditor’s professional judgment as to the maximum amount of
misstatement(s) that if not corrected in the financial statements will not affect the economic
decisions taken by a financial statement user. If the amount of uncorrected misstatements, either
individually or in the aggregate, is higher than the overall materiality established for the audit, it
implies that the financial statements are materially misstated. The overall materiality amount is one
of the factors by which the ultimate success or failure of the audit will be judged.
For example, consider that overall materiality was set at an amount of ` 25 millions. If, as a result of
performing audit procedures:
Overall materiality is based on the common financial information needs of the various users as a
group and therefore, the possible effect of misstatements on specific individual users, whose needs
may vary widely, is not considered.
In selecting the most appropriate benchmark to determine materiality, the auditor should develop
an understanding of the users of the financial statements specific to their client. Some of the
benchmarks commonly used include: revenue, profit before taxes, total assets or expenses. The
auditor makes a judgment on which benchmark to use by understanding what the users of the
financial statements are most likely to be concerned about. For example, if an entity is financed
solely by debt rather than equity, users may put more emphasis on assets, and claims on them, than
on the entity’s earnings. An illustrative list of factors that affect the selection of an appropriate
benchmark by the auditor includes:
Whether there are items on which the users tend to focus (for example, the users may tend
to focus on EBITDA);
The nature of the entity and the industry (for example retail sector or company engaged in
real estate);
The entity’s ownership structure and the way it is financed (for example if the entity is
mainly financed by equity investors who are concerned with financial performance, net
profit before taxes may be an appropriate benchmark);
The relative volatility of the benchmark (for example, does the pre-taxation profit fluctuates
significantly from year to year?).
The users of the financial statements include: investors, creditors, suppliers, employees, customers,
state institutions, public in general. However, in every case, the users, who are interested in financial
statements and its information, are different.
Some users of the financial statements and their needs are illustrated below:
In this example, both the revenue and profit before tax are increasing from year to year and the
profit before tax as percentage of sales is fluctuating. The company estimates the turnover for FY
2020-21 to be 2,800 trillion based on 11 months actual sales and orders in hand.
The auditor considers that it is more appropriate to use ‘normalised’ profit before tax to determine
materiality. The auditor considers average profit before tax of past three years, that is 266 trillion to
calculate materiality.
Illustration 2
Exceptional items
In this example, the profit before tax is fluctuating on year basis both in absolute terms and as
percentage of sales. The auditor notes that the company is rationalising its operations and has been
retrenching workers in the past three years. However, there is no further retrenchment in FY 2020-
21.
Accordingly, the auditor considers it appropriate it to first compute normalised profit by excluding
retrenchment costs and then use the average of three years’ normalised profit before tax to
calculate materiality Therefore the auditor considers 1,832.06 trillion shs as the benchmark for
calculating materiality.
(b) Turnover
Though most users of financial statements are generally concerned with profitability, this is not the
only consideration, particularly in companies where profit before tax is volatile. For some industries,
for example retail, revenue is a significant factor in management reporting and important to
investors. In such cases, revenue may be considered to be an appropriate benchmark for
determining materiality.
Gross Profit
Total Expenses
Shareholders’ equity
Identifying the financial data is not as straightforward as it appears. It may be necessary to consider
materiality before the financial statements to be audited are prepared, for example when planning is
done prior to the year-end. In other cases, planning takes place after the draft financial statements
to be audited have been provided, but it may be apparent that those statements require significant
modification. In such situations materiality is based on a reasonable expectation of the amounts in
the eventual financial statements. This may be obtained by extrapolating amounts either from
interim management reports or from interim financial statements (for example nine months
financial results) or the financial statements of one or more prior annual periods, as long as these
are adjusted for major changes in the entity’s circumstances, such as a significant merger.