Question
Auditing Standards: According to pages 1 to 16 of the Government Auditing Standards Website: https://www.gao.gov/assets/700/693136.pdf and the Government Performance Audit Textbook paragraphs, Why do we
Auditing Standards: According to pages 1 to 16 of the Government Auditing Standards Website: https://www.gao.gov/assets/700/693136.pdf
and the Government Performance Audit Textbook paragraphs, Why do we need auditing standards in your opinion based on your observation?
Please also see the paragraphs from Government Performance Audit Textbook to get an idea:
"As the audit official with the largest staff in the country, the Comptroller General of the
United States, a legislative auditor, has taken the lead in establishing governmental audit
standards. A 1968 document, "Internal Auditing in Federal Agencies," paralleled the Statement
of the Institute of Internal Auditors. It called on federal agency internal auditors not to restrict
audit to accounting and financial matters, but also to review "operations and activities." It also
listed specific areas of concern in "appraising performance" and "evaluating efficiency and
economy." For those federal agencies that were in the forefront of the profession, the document
served as a useful codification of practice.
In 1972, the Comptroller General issued a landmark document. Titled Standards for Audit
of Governmental Organizations, Programs, Activities & Functions (and called the "Yellow Book"
because of its cover), the document served as a clarion call to some state and local government
auditors that had not yet moved beyond accounting and financial matters. More important, the
document dropped the notion that audit in government involved undefined "operations and
activities" other than accounting and financial matters. Recognizing that audit concepts and
practices were still evolving and that the standards were purposely "forward-looking," the Yellow
Book declared that the full scope of a government audit covered financial and compliance,
economy and efficiency, and program results. The three elements were defined this way:
1. Financial and compliance -- determines (a) whether financial operations are properly
conducted, (b) whether the financial reports of an audited entity are presented fairly, and
(c) whether the entity has complied with applicable laws and regulations.
2. Economy and efficiency -- determines whether the entity is managing or utilizing its
resources (personnel, property, space and so forth) in an economical and efficient manner
and the causes of any inefficiencies or uneconomical practices, including inadequacies in
management information systems, administrative procedures, or organizational structure.
3. Program results -- determines whether the desired results or benefits are being achieved,
whether the objectives established by the legislature or other authorizing body are being met,
and whether the agency has considered alternatives which might yield desired results
at a lower cost.
The underlying premise of the Yellow Book was, and continues to be, that of public
accountability. Public officials are accountable to those who provide the resources used to carry
out governmental programs. Consequently, they should render a full accounting to those to
whom they are accountable. Public accountability embraces the three elements of financial and
compliance, economy and efficiency, and program results. By including all three elements in its
scope, auditing - by providing independent judgments on those accountings - plays a major role
in the accountability process.
The Comptroller General's Government Auditing Standards have been updated several times
since they were first published in 1972 and a series of federal laws have added teeth to the
standards. Federal inspectors general and other federal auditors are required by law to comply
with them. Laws also required that the standards be followed in federal audits of state and local
governments, institutions of higher education, and other not-for-profit entities that received
federal financial assistance. Many state and local audit entities have adopted them either
officially or unofficially. The Washington State Auditor, for example, is specifically required to
follow Government Auditing Standards."
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