Auditing & assurance services : a systematic approach,10th ed.

The pace of change in the financial statement auditing environment continues to accelerate, even as the need for reliabile, high-quality assurance over financial reporting continues to intensify. The auditing environment is far more complex and dynamic today than it was even 10 years ago. Today, f...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: William F. Messier, Jr., Steven M. Glover, Douglas F. Prawitt.
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: McGraw Hill 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/jspui/handle/123456789/15074
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:The pace of change in the financial statement auditing environment continues to accelerate, even as the need for reliabile, high-quality assurance over financial reporting continues to intensify. The auditing environment is far more complex and dynamic today than it was even 10 years ago. Today, for example, financial statement auditors practice in a regulated environment and must deal with three sets of auditing standards: the standards of the PCAOB for audits of U.S. public companies, the standards of the AICPA’s Auditing Standards Board for audits of essentially all other U.S. entities (e.g., private companies, government entities, universities), and the standards of the IFAC’s International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board for audits of entities based outside of the United States. And those standards have undergone change at an unprecedented pace, with few signs of slowing. It is difficult enough for us as professors to stay abreast of the unprecedented change and complexity in the auditing environment; it is simply unrealistic to expect our students to be able to grasp all of this while they are working diligently just to learn the fundamentals of financial statement auditing. That is why we have focused our efforts in this new edition to present the fundamentals of auditing in a crisp, clear, and understandable way, helping students navigate the inherent complexity while gaining a deep, intuitive grasp of fundamental auditing concepts. We do this by using simple yet compelling illustrations, examples, and analogies, such as relating the demand for an audit to the desire of a prospective home buyer to hire a house inspector. Our hope is that students will not only understand the important standards and concepts underlying auditing but that they will gain an intuitive grasp of why it is important and how the underlying logic can inform their judgments not only as auditors but as business people. In terms of the three sets of extant auditing standards, we simplify the complexities involved by adopting an approach similar to that taken by all of the major international accounting firms: we start with a base set of standards (in our case, the AICPA’s new body of “clarity” standards, which are at this point very similar to the IAASB standards) and we build on that base by addressing any requirements in the PCAOB standards that require more from the auditor. The AICPA’s clarity standards are newly converged with international auditing standards, which means that by studying this book your students will learn the auditing concepts that underlie an audit performed under any of the three extant sets of standards. All of the major firms have adopted a similar approach because it allows their professionals to practice effectively in any environment, domestic or international, using a single, merged set of auditing standards, rather than having to learn the specifics of three different sets. Your students will have that same advantage in learning auditing from this book.