a.
Introduction: Audit is the activity performed by the professional known as the auditor. In audit the validity and reliability of the information given by the company is correct of not. True and fair view of the books of accounts is shown in the
The statistical conclusion if no misstatements are found in the sample and whether its account balance acceptable.
b.
Introduction: Audit is the activity performed by the professional known as the auditor. In audit the validity and reliability of the information given by the company is correct of not. True and fair view of the books of accounts is shown in the balance sheet of the company and annually present to the shareholder and boards of director of the company.
Compute the total estimated misstatements.
c.
Introduction: Audit is the activity performed by the professional known as the auditor. In audit the validity and reliability of the information given by the company is correct of not. True and fair view of the books of accounts is shown in the balance sheet of the company and annually present to the shareholder and boards of director of the company.
The results indicates the account balance as acceptable.
d.
Introduction: Audit is the activity performed by the professional known as the auditor. In audit the validity and reliability of the information given by the company is correct of not. True and fair view of the books of accounts is shown in the balance sheet of the company and annually present to the shareholder and boards of director of the company.
If results are not acceptable other course of action available to the auditor.
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Auditing: A Risk Based-Approach to Conducting a Quality Audit
- S1: Mean per unit estimation is a classical variable sampling technique that projects the sample average to the total population by multiplying the sample average by the number of items in the population. S2: The more the auditor is relying on other substantive procedures to reduce to an acceptable level the detection risk regarding a particular population, the less assurance the auditor will require from sampling, and the smaller the sample size can be. a. BOTH STATEMENTS ARE TRUE b. BOTH STATEMENTS ARE FALSE c. ONLY S1 IS TRUE d. ONLY S2 IS TRUEarrow_forwardWhich of the following combinations results in an increase in sample size in an attribute sample? a. Allowable Risk of Overreliance Tolerable Rate Expected Population Deviation Rate Decrease Decrease Increase b. Allowable Risk of Overreliance Tolerable Rate Expected Population Deviation Rate Decrease Increase Decrease c. Allowable Risk of Overreliance Tolerable Rate Expected Population Deviation Rate Increase Increase Decrease d. Allowable Risk of Overreliance Tolerable Rate Expected Population Deviation Rate Increase Increase Increase e. Allowable Risk of Overreliance Tolerable Rate Expected Population Deviation Rate Increase Decrease Increasearrow_forwardThe sample size of a test of controls varies inversely with: Expected Population Tolerable deviation rate Rate A. Yes Yes B. No No C. Yes No D. No Yesarrow_forward
- Consider a population proportion p = 0.20. a. What are the expected value and the standard error for the sampling distribution of the sample proportion with n = 20 and n = 58? Note: Round the standard error to 4 decimal places. Answer is complete and correct. n Expected value Standard error 20 58 0.20 0.20 0.0894 0.0525 b. Can you conclude that the sampling distribution of the sample proportion is approximately normally distributed for both sample sizes? Yes, the sampling distribution of the sample proportion is normally distributed for both sample sizes. No, the sampling distribution of the sample proportion is not normally distributed for either sample size. No, only the sample proportion with n = 20 will have a normal distribution. No, only the sample proportion with n = 58 will have a normal distribution. c. If the sampling distribution of the sample proportion is normally distributed with n = 20, then calculate the probability that the sample proportion is between 0.18 and 0.20.…arrow_forwardK Conduct a test at the α = 0.05 level of significance by determining (a) the null and alternative hypotheses, (b) the test statistic, and (c) the P-value. Assume the samples were obtained independently from a large population using simple random sampling. Test whether p₁> P2. The sample data are x₁ = 116, n₁ = 244, x2 = 132, and n₂ = 313. (a) Choose the correct null and alternative hypotheses below. OA. Ho P1 P2 versus H₁: P1 P2 OB. Ho P₁ P2 versus H₁: P₁ P2 OD. Ho p₁ =0 versus H₁:.p₁ #0 (b) Determine the test statistic. Zo= (Round to two decimal places as needed.) (c) Determine the P-value. The P-value is (Round to three decimal places as needed.) What is the result of this hypothesis test? OA. Do not reject the null hypothesis because there is not sufficient evidence to conclude that p₁ #p2- OB. Do not reject the null hypothesis because there is not sufficient evidence to conclude that p₁ P2- OD. Reject the null hypothesis because there is sufficient evidence to conclude that p₁…arrow_forwardWhen using monetary unit sampling, a population is accepted as being materially correct when the: Tolerable misstatement is greater than the upper limit on misstatement. Incremental allowance is less than the upper limit on misstatement. Projected misstatement is less than the upper limit on misstatement. Basic precision is greater than the projected misstatement.arrow_forward
- The interpretation of the ULRD in an attributes sampling application isa. The estimated rate of deviation in the population with probability equal to the risk ofoverreliance that the population deviation rate is higher.b. The estimated rate of deviation in the population with probability equal to the risk ofoverreliance that the actual rate of deviation is lower.c. The estimated rate of deviation in the population with certainty that the actual rate ofdeviation is lower.d. The estimated rate of deviation in the population with certainty that the actual rate ofdeviation is higher.arrow_forwardThe sample size of the test of controls varies directly with: Expected Population Deviation Rate Tolerable Rate Risk of Assessing Control Risk Too Low A. Yes Yes No B. No No Yes C. Yes No No D. No Yes Yes E. Yes Yes Yes A B C D Earrow_forwardIn calculating the projected misstatement in monetary unit sampling, accounts with a book value larger than the sampling interval are extended to the projected misstatement at their: Misstatement amount. Actual book value. Tainting percentage times the sampling interval. Tainting percentage times their book value.arrow_forward
- Exercise 14-11 Algo The following table lists the National Basketball Association's leading scorers, their average points per game (PPG), and their average minutes per game (MPG) for 2008. [You may find it useful to reference the t table.) MPG PPG 30.4 D. Hade 37.8 36.8 L. Janes 30.4 28.5 35.3 K. Bryant D. Nowitzki D. Granger K. Durant C. Paul C. Anthony C. Bosh B. Roy bo 27.7 36.4 27.6 27.1 24.6 35.5 38.4 37.9 24.6 34.1 24.5 24.4 37.5 36.7 Cick here for the Excel Data File a-1. Calculate the sample correlation coefficient between PPG and MPG, (Round intermediate calculations to at least 4 decimal places and final answer to 4 decimel places.) Sample correlation coefficientarrow_forwardThe unique feature of monetary unit sampling is thata. Sampling units are not chosen at random.b. A dollar unit selected in a sample is not replaced before the sample selection is completed.c. Auditors need not worry about the risk of incorrect acceptance decision.d. The population is defined as the number of monetary units in an account balance or class of transactions.arrow_forward1arrow_forward
- Auditing: A Risk Based-Approach (MindTap Course L...AccountingISBN:9781337619455Author:Karla M Johnstone, Audrey A. Gramling, Larry E. RittenbergPublisher:Cengage LearningEssentials of Business Analytics (MindTap Course ...StatisticsISBN:9781305627734Author:Jeffrey D. Camm, James J. Cochran, Michael J. Fry, Jeffrey W. Ohlmann, David R. AndersonPublisher:Cengage LearningAuditing: A Risk Based-Approach to Conducting a Q...AccountingISBN:9781305080577Author:Karla M Johnstone, Audrey A. Gramling, Larry E. RittenbergPublisher:South-Western College Pub