Auditing: Concept of Materiality
Auditing: Concept of Materiality
• Prevention/Solution
• Implementing proper accounting policies
or internal controls can help companies
avoid material misstatements in its
financial statements. Employing educated
or professionally licensed accountants can
also help companies improve their overall
accounting process.
Materiality : Prevention/Solution
• Prevention / Solution
• Although these preventive measures can
be time-consuming and expensive to
develop and implement, they usually pay
for themselves by limiting the number of
errors or misstatements found during the
audit process
Materiality: Expert Insight
• Expert Insight
– Using a public accounting firm to develop
accounting policies and internal controls helps
companies understand current accounting
practices. The accounting industry is well
versed in technical accounting rules and the
changing business environment.
Materiality: Expert Insight
– Accounting professionals may also be able to
advise companies on the highest risk areas of
their operations and explain the importance of
accounting policies or internal controls for
these operations.
Materiality: In Summary
• Materiality is a concept or convention within
auditing and accounting relating to the
importance/significance of an amount,
transaction, or discrepancy. The objective of an
audit of financial statements is to enable the
auditor to express an opinion whether the
financial statements are prepared, in all material
respects, in conformity with an identified
financial reporting framework such as Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). The
assessment of what is material is a matter of
professional judgment.
Materiality : Summary
• "Information is material if its omission or
misstatement could influence the economic
decision of users taken on the basis of the
financial statements. Materiality depends on the
size of the item or error judged in the particular
circumstances of its omission or misstatement.
Thus, materiality provides a threshold or cut-off
point rather than being a primary qualitative
characteristic which information must have if it is
to be useful."
Materiality: quantitative guidelines
1. On an income statement, an omission or error
greater than 5% of Profit (before tax), or greater
than 0.5% of sales revenues is more likely to be
considered "large enough to matter."
2. On a balance sheet, a questionable entry
more than 0.3 to 0.5% of total assets or more
than 1% of total equity, is more likely to be
viewed suspiciously.
Materiality
• The final judgment on a suspected
materiality abuse, however, will also
consider factors besides the magnitude
of the error. Auditors and courts will
also consider
• AR = CR*IR*DR
• where... IR is inherent risk, CR is control
risk and DR , detection risk is the
conditional probability that the auditor
does not detect a material misstatement in
the F/S, given that one exists.
Audit Risk Model
• The audit risk model expresses the relationships
among the audit risk components as follows:
• AR = IR x CR x DR
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Audit Risk
• AR + 5% , IR = 75% , CR = 50%
• Detection Risk ( DR) can be determined as follows:
• AR .05
• DR = ---------------------- = 13%
• IR (.75) x CR (.50)