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Confuision of verb used in TOC and Substantive procedures

Forums › Ask ACCA Tutor Forums › Ask the Tutor ACCA AA Exams › Confuision of verb used in TOC and Substantive procedures

  • This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 10 years ago by Ken Garrett.
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  • December 24, 2014 at 3:58 am #221562
    nayzaw
    Participant
    • Topics: 1
    • Replies: 0
    • ☆

    Dear sir,

    Please kindly help me, I am often confused with the verb used in TOC and Substantive Procedures whenever i study the case. i do want to know that problems clearly sir.

    Best wishes

    December 24, 2014 at 1:19 pm #221580
    Ken Garrett
    Keymaster
    • Topics: 10
    • Replies: 10591
    • ☆☆☆☆☆

    An audit procedure is any audit test that auditors carry out during the audit. There are two main types:

    1 Tests of control
    2 Substantive tests.

    If using tests of control, you have to be testing the operation of a control. So if the auditor traces from purchase invoices to the payables ledger then to the cash book payments that is NOT a test of control. If the auditor were to test that someone on the company’s staff checked that all invoices were credited to the payables ledger, then that is a test of control because the auditor is ensuring that the employees was carrying out the control specified.

    Substantive tests are of two types: analytical procedures (ratios and comparisons) and tests of detail, essentially the auditor reperforming of tracing transactions. So the example above of the auditors themselves tracing from invoice to payables ledger to cash book is a test of detail because the auditor is testing the detail and accuracy of the transaction, not testing any sort of control over it.

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