1 Which internal control procedure would be most cost-effective in dealing with the fol- lowing expenditure cycle threats? a. A purchasing agent orders materials from a supplier that he partially owns. b. Receiving-dock personnel steal inventory and then claim the inventory was sent to the warehouse. c. An unordered supply of laser printer paper delivered to the office is accepted and paid for because the "price is right." After all of the laser printers are jammed, how- ever, it becomes obvious that the "bargain" paper is of inferior quality. d. The company fails to take advantage of a 1% discount for promptly paying a vendor invoice. e. A company is late in paying a particular invoice. Consequently, a second invoice is sent, which crosses the first invoice's payment in the mail. The second invoice is submitted for processing and also paid. f. Inventory records show that an adequate supply of copy paper should be in stock, but none is available on the supply shelf. g. The inventory records are incorrectly updated when a receiving-dock employee en- ters the wrong product number at the terminal. h. A clerical employee obtains a blank check and writes a large amount payable to a fictitious company. The employee then cashes the check. i. A fictitious invoice is received and a check is issued to pay for goods that were never ordered or delivered. j. The petty cash custodian confesses to having "borrowed" $12,000 over the last five years. k. A purchasing agent adds a new record to the supplier master file. The company does not exist. Subsequently, the purchasing agent submits invoices from the fake com- pany for various cleaning services. The invoices arc paid. 1. A clerk affixes a price tag intended for a low-end flat-panel TV to a top-of-the- line model. The clerk's friend then purchases that item, which the clerk scans at the checkout counter