You just commenced work as a junior internal auditor at a manufacturing business that employs about 200
Question:
- You just commenced work as a junior internal auditor at a manufacturing business that employs about 200 people and has an annual turnover of about $100m per year. However, the management is concerned that gross profit (sales less cost of goods sold) seems to be declining.
The business has a number of subsidiaries. These subsidiaries were set up for a variety of reasons. Each subsidiary is 100% owned by the manufacturing business and carries out services for the business in different states, such as New South Wales and Western Australia.
The business has 2 production managers, each looking after one distinct product line. Each manager supervises around 80 workers. The remaining 40 workers are in various administrative and non-production areas, such as HR, security, treasury, and accounting.
The accounting team has 2 staff processing A/R, 2 processing A/P, and a cashier. These all report to the chief accountant. The business also has a purchasing officer who makes purchases for the main business and all subsidiaries. All of these are supervised by the financial controller. The financial controller reports to the chief financial officer, who in turn reports to the chief executive officer.
Recently, a member of the A/P team approached you and expressed concern about certain transactions. The financial controller had told both A/P staff to send all invoices to him that relate to purchases of inventory for a new subsidiary no one seemed to have heard of before. Unusually, these goods would be shipped directly from the supplier to the subsidiary’s warehouse. The usual practice in the business is that all purchases go to a central warehouse and are then sent to production as required. The financial controller said that he would approve the invoices for payment relating to the new subsidiary. When one of the A/P staff suggested this was not usual practice, the financial controller started shouting and threatened both staffs would lose their jobs if they did not follow his instructions.
Required
- You do not want to confront the financial controller, as you don’t have any evidence and he seems to be aggressive. Identify specific checks in relation to these transactions you could undertake to try to see if a problem exists. (15 marks)
- What type of breach of internal controls do the financial controller’s actions represent?
Discuss the implications of this sort of risk for an internal control environment.
Accounting Business Reporting for Decision Making
ISBN: 9780730302414
4th edition
Authors: Jacqueline Birt, Keryn Chalmers, Albie Brooks, Suzanne Byrne, Judy Oliver