Rais12 SM CH16
Rais12 SM CH16
Rais12 SM CH16
com
16.1 Although XBRL facilitates the electronic exchange of financial information, some
external users do not think it goes far enough. They would like access to the entire
general ledger, not just to XBRL-tagged financial reports that summarize general
ledger accounts. Should companies provide external users with such access? Why or
why not?
No, companies should not provide access to their general ledger. Providing external
users access to a companys general ledger opens the company up to significant
competitive and financial risk.
16.2 How can responsibility accounting and flexible budgets improve morale?
Responsibility accounting improves morale by holding managers accountable only for the
activities over which they have control. In this way, they are not unfairly punished for
poor performance that they could not alter.
Flexible budgeting enables more accurate interpretation of deviations from budget. For
example, if activity levels are higher than planned, then costs should also increase.
Therefore, costs higher than the original budget may not be bad if they have risen at a
rate less than or equal to the proportionate increase in activity.
The audit trail is a detective control used to verify the accuracy and completeness of
transaction processing. Tracing a set of source documents forward through the journal
entries that updated the general ledger verifies that the transactions were actually
recorded. Tracing changes in general ledger accounts back to source documents provides
a way to verify that the transactions did indeed occur and that they were recorded
correctly.
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It may indeed be possible for measures on three dimensions of the balanced scorecard to
improve, but for financial results to deteriorate. This may occur because the 3 other areas
are leading indicators of financial performance. If so, the latter should soon begin to
improve.
On the other hand, it may be that the measures developed for the other areas are flawed in
that they do not address activities that customers value. Consequently, improved
performance on those dimensions does not translate into improved profitability. In this
case, management needs to redesign the nonfinancial dimensions of the Balanced
Scorecard to include items that are causally related to future financial performance.
16.5 Do you think that mandatory standards should be developed for the design of
graphs of financial data that are included in annual reports and other periodic
communications to investors? Why or why not?
There is no right answer here but it should generate a good discussion. It may be helpful
to start the discussion off by talking about the reporting standards of the SEC and FASB.
It may also be useful to find annual reports or other financial news stories that contain
graphs which violate one or more of the rules presented in this chapter, and ask students
to discuss the effects, if any, of such violations.
Should students support standards, a good follow-up topic concerns the type of audit
guidance that would be helpful.
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16.1 Match the term in the left column with its appropriate definition from the right
column:
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16.2 Which control procedure would be most effective in addressing the following
problems?
a. When entering a journal entry to record issuance of new debt, the treasurer
inadvertently transposes two digits in the debit amount.
Use a cross-footing balance check to test the equality of debits and credits
d. A sales manager tipped off friends that the companys financial results, to be
released tomorrow, were unexpectedly good.
Implement access controls to prevent the sales manager from obtaining access to
the general ledger and reporting system.
e. The general ledger master file is stored on disk. For some reason, the disk is no
longer readable. It takes the accounting department a week to reenter the past
months transactions from source documents in order to create a new general
ledger master file.
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h. Instead of a zero, the letter o was entered when typing in data values in an
XBRL instance document.
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16.3 Explain the components of an audit trail for verifying changes to accounts payable.
Your answer should specify how those components can be used to verify the
accuracy, completeness, and validity of all purchases, purchase returns, purchase
discounts, debit memos, and cash disbursements.
The sum of all amounts owed to individual vendors would be computed and compared to
the balance in the general ledger accounts payable control account.
To verify all transactions, you would follow the audit trail to identify the voucher
numbers, purchase order numbers, and receiving report numbers for all approved vendor
invoices and use that list to select all source documents.
You could then recalculate the total amount purchased and the total cash disbursed. You
could also recalculate all purchase discounts available and compare that to the amount
taken.
To verify vendor balances, you could recompute the effects of all purchases and
payments on the beginning balance; this calculated figure should equal the new ending
balance.
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16.4 As manager of a local pizza parlor, you want to develop a balanced scorecard so you
can more effectively monitor the restaurants performance.
a. Propose at least two goals for each dimension, and explain why those goals are
important to the overall success of the pizza parlor. One goal should be purely
performance-oriented and the other should be risk-related.
b. Suggest specific measures for each goal developed in part a.
Customer
Customer satisfaction Customer satisfaction rating 9.5 9.6
Attract new customers Percentage of sales to first time 10% 3%
customers
Fast service Average time to serve food 15 minutes 14 minutes
Internal operations
Reduce waste Food waste (% of sales) 3% 4%
Reduce mistakes Percentage of orders with mistakes 1% 2%
Innovation and
learning
Develop new products Number of new products this year 2 2
c. Explain how to gather the data needed for each measure developed in part b.
The other measures would have to be collected as part of performing the activities.
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16.5 Use Table 16-1 to create a questionnaire checklist that can be used to evaluate
controls in the general ledger and reporting cycle.
a. For each control issue, write a Yes/No question such that a No answer
represents a control weakness. For example, one question might be Is access to
the general ledger restricted?
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7 Without an audit trail, it is not possible to verify the completeness and accuracy
of all changes to the general ledger.
8 Failure to audit spreadsheets for errors increases the risk of erroneous adjusting
entries
9 Training in XBRL is necessary to avoid making errors in the mapping of the
organizations data to taxonomy elements or the unnecessary creation of
taxonomy extensions
10 Failure to validate an instance document by someone not involved in its
creation increases the risk of submitting inaccurate instance documents.
11 If employees have not been trained in the principles of proper graph design,
they may create misleading graphs.
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16.6 Visit the SEC website (www.sec.gov) and explore what is available in terms of
interactive data (the SECs term for XBRL reports). Use the SECs viewer software
and examine the annual reports for two companies.
16.7 Obtain the annual report of a company assigned by your professor. Read the
management discussion and analysis section, and develop a balanced scorecard that
reflects that companys vision, mission, and strategy. Create both performance-
oriented and risk-based goals and measures for each section of the balanced
scorecard.
The key to this assignment is the appropriateness of the goals and measures developed for
the Balanced Scorecard in light of managements discussion about the mission, vision,
and values of the company. This requires inferring from managements discussion in the
annual report the companys strategy (low-cost or product differentiation) and strategic
position (variety-based, needs-based, or access-based).
You should probably develop your own grading key, based on what you expect from the
students. At a minimum, students need to develop multiple goals for each of the four
dimensions of the Balanced Scorecard. They also need to present quantifiable measures
for each goal.
To facilitate grading, ask them to turn in both the annual report they used and a list of
references to specific points in the management discussion that they used to justify their
choice of goals and measures.
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a. Sales
Sales
640,000
575,000 598,000
560,000
530,000
640,000
575,000 598,000
560,000
530,000
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d. Which principles of graph design, if any, did you have to manually implement to
over-ride the default graphs created by Excel?
1. Students had to reverse the x-axis, which automatically followed the sequence of
years in the spreadsheet.
2. Students had to adjust the y-axis to begin at zero for earnings per share. However, if
variations in EPS are important to monitor, then the default graph below may be
preferred.
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16.9 Excel Problem Objective: Create pivot tables for what-if analysis
Read the article Make Excel an Instant Know-It-All by Roberta Ann Jones in the March 2004 issue of the Journal of
Accountancy. (Available at www.aicpa.org)
a. Follow the instructions in the article to create a spreadsheet with pivot tables.
First, create the spreadsheet. Then, to create the Pivot Table, position your cursor in a cell where you want the Pivot Table to
appear. Then click on the Insert Tab, and then click on the Pivot Table choice.
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Clicking OK yields the following blank skeleton outline of a PivotTable which we will use in parts b and c to create PivotTables:
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b. Print out a report that shows sales by month for each salesperson.
Step1: select the salesperson, order date, and order amount fields in the window in the upper right corner that says Choose
Fields to add to Report.
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Step 2: Then click on the salesperson entry and move it from the Row Labels window to the Column Labels window.
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Step 3: Highlight all the cells in the PivotTable and format them to display currency with two decimals.
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c. Assume that Brown and David are in sales group 1 and the other three salespeople are in sales group 2. Print out a
report that shows monthly sales for each group.
Step 1: To separate the sales people into groups, click on the sales person row in the Pivot Table and highlight Brown and David.
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Step 2: Right click the two highlighted cells and select Group. They will now have a super-title called Group 1. Do the same
for the other three sales people to form group 2. The spreadsheet should look like this:
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Step 3: You can collapse and display the groups by clicking on the button to the left of each group name. The preceding screen
shot showed all members of each group (note the minus signs to the left of the labels Group1 and Group2). Clicking those to
change to a plus sign produces the following:
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a. Read the article Tweaking the Numbers, by Theo Callahan in the June 2001 issue of the Journal of Accountancy
(either the print edition, likely available at your schools library, or access the Journal of Accountancy archives at
www.aicpa.org). Follow the instructions in the article to create a spreadsheet with graphs that do what-if analysis.
Most of the steps in the article can be done as indicated. One difference is finding the control toolbox to create a spin button. This
requires that the Developer tab is available as shown below.
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On the Developer tab you then click insert and select the spin box option from the list of
choices of Active X controls. Then position your cursor in the cell where you want to insert a
spin button and left-click once. You can now right-click on the spin-button and fill in the
values for the spin buttons as indicated in the article.
Hint: it may help to increase the height of the rows before trying to add more spin buttons.
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2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
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b. Now create a spreadsheet to do graphical what-if analysis for the cash gap.
Cash gap represents the number of days between when a company has to pay its
suppliers and when it gets paid by its customers. Thus, Cash gap = Inventory
days on hand + Receivables collection period Accounts payable period.
The cash gap formula indicates how much of a cushion a company has, given a set
of assumptions about inventory, receivables, and payables. If the projected cash gap
is too small, management can increase it by instituting changes that either increase the
delay in paying suppliers, speeding up collections from customers, or reducing
inventory levels.
The purpose of your spreadsheet is to display visually what happens to cash gap
when you tweak policies concerning inventory, receivables, and payables.
Thus, you will create a spreadsheet that looks like Figure 16-11
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16.1 Student reports will vary depending on what they find and focus on in the website. The
website contains pages such as Latest News, Project News, Technical News, etc.
However, the useful page for students will likely be the XBRL IN ACTION page. This
page contains case studies that describe how XBRL is being used in specific
organizations, details of XBRL projects that are being implemented or are currently being
developed. It also contains interactive demonstrations of XBRL projects and descriptions
of XBRL related products and services.
16.2 Answers will vary depending upon the package selected and depth of research
undertaken. You may want to assign the package to be researched in order to reduce the
number of students studying the same package.
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