Computer Aided Audit Tools
Computer Aided Audit Tools
Jump to: navigation, search This article is written like a personal reflection or essay and may require cleanup. Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style. (August 2009) Computer Assisted Audit Techniques or Computer Aided Audit Tools (CAATS), also known as Computer Assisted Audit Tools and Techniques (CAATTs), is a growing field within the Financial audit profession. CAATTs is the practice of using computers to automate or simplify the audit process. In the broadest sense of the term, CAATTs can refer to any use of a computer during the audit. This would include utilizing basic software packages such as SAS, Excel, Access, Crystal Reports, Cognos, Business Objects, and also word processors. In practice, however, CAATs has become synonymous with incorporating Data analytics into the audit process. This is one of the emerging fields within the audit profession.
Contents
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1 Traditional Auditing vs CAATTs o 1.1 Traditional Audit Example o 1.2 CAATTs Alternative o 1.3 Traditional Audit vs CAATTs on Specific Risks 2 Specialized Software 3 Other uses of CAATTS o 3.1 Creation of Electronic Work Papers o 3.2 Fraud Detection o 3.3 Analytical Tests o 3.4 Data Analysis Reports o 3.5 Continuous Monitoring o 3.6 Curb stoning in surveys 4 Note on the Acronyms CAATTs vs CAATs o 4.1 CAATTs and Other BEASTs for Auditors by David Coderre 5 See also 6 External links 7 References
Using CAATTs the auditor can select every claim that had a date of service after the policy termination date. The auditor then can determine if any claims were inappropriately paid. If they were, the auditor can then figure out why the controls to prevent this failed. In a real life audit, the CAATTs auditor noted that a number of claims had been paid after policies were terminated. Using CAATTs the auditor was able to identify every claim that was paid and the exact dollar amount incorrectly paid by the insurance company. Furthermore, the auditor was able to identify the reason why these claims were paid. The reason why they were paid was because the participant paid their premium. The insurance company, having received a payment, paid the claims. Then after paying the claim the participant's check bounced. When the check bounced, the participant's policy was retroactively terminated, but the claim was still paid costing the company hundreds of thousands of dollars per year. Which looks better in an audit report: "Audit reviewed 50 transactions and noted one transaction that was processed incorrectly" or "Audit utilized CAATTS and tested every transaction over the past year. We noted XXX exceptions wherein the company paid YYY dollars on terminated policies." However, the CAATTs driven review is limited only to the data saved on files in accordance with a systematic pattern. Much data is never documented this way. In addition saved data often contains deficiencies, is poorly classified, is not easy to get, and it might be hard to become convinced about its integrity. So, for the present CAATTs is complement to an auditor's tools and techniques. In certain audits CAATTs can't be used at all. But there are also audits which simply can't be made with due care and efficiently without CAATTs.
ESKORT Computer Audit (SESAM) [4] ActiveData For Excel [6] CorpSystem ActiveData [8] Monarch TopCAATs for Excel [10] Picalo [11] Benefits of audit software include:
Intracom IT Services Denmark A/S [5] InformationActive Inc [7] CCH / Wolters Kluwer Datawatch Corporation [9] Reinvent Data Ltd Partly Open Source
They are independent of the system being audited and will use a read-only copy of the file to avoid any corruption of an organizations data. Many audit-specific routines are used such as sampling. Provides documentation of each test performed in the software that can be used as documentation in the auditors work papers.
Data queries. Data stratification. Sample extractions. Missing sequence identification. Statistical analysis. Calculations. Duplicate inquires. Pivot tables. Cross tabulation
CAATTs provides auditors with tools that can identify unexpected or unexplained patterns in data that may indicate fraud. Whether the CAATS is simple or complex, data analysis provides many benefits in the prevention and detection of fraud. CAATTs can assist the auditor in detecting fraud by performing and creating the following,
The first "A" and the "T" can have two different meanings depending on who uses the term. By using the term CAATTs, one is clearly incorporating both "Tools" AND "Techniques."
Comparing fraud detection software CAAT Automation Tool 2009 IT Audit Benchmarking Study (The Institute of Internal Auditors)
[edit] References
Information Technology Control and Audit; Frederick Gallegos, Sandra Senft, et al.; 2nd Edition ISBN 0-8493-2032-1 Audit Tools Use of Computer-Assisted Audit Tools and Techniques (CAATTs), Part 1 Audit Tools Use of Computer-Assisted Audit Tools and Techniques (CAATTs), Part 2 The IIA's GTAG 3: Continuous Auditing: Implications for Assurance, Monitoring, and Risk Assessment
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