¶ … Auditing; Topic: Materiality in Auditing
With respect to the field of auditing, materiality is a critically important concept addressing the significance of discrepancies, amounts, and transactions. Specific materiality guidelines are required in accounting practices to avoid judgmental (legal) decisions. Materiality is applied for most, if not all, economic decisions, and the topic of materiality is not a new issue. Disclosures in re financial statements have been emphasized by courts in the United Kingdom since the 1800's, whereas materiality initially rose to importance in the United States following 1933's Security act. The significance of the materiality concept and its implications are pertinent to business decisions, as well as for analysis and preparation of financial statements and in order to apply GAAP, generally accepted accounting principles.
For the accounting field, as well as for all fields of management, the concept of materiality is central to decision making. If something is considered to be immaterial, such as events, transactions, or specific items, it does not have to be separately reported in financial statements; this means that anything deemed immaterial is not accessible in the financial statements to creditors and/or investors. For this reason, stakeholders are often particularly interested in 'non-mandatory' information, as these data are not 'required' to be made available, but may be of considerable significance. Indeed, investors are more likely to focus on non-mandatory information than mandatory in many cases (Juma'h, 2009).
Definition of Materiality
The materiality concept has been addressed by The International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC), as well as by accounting bodies in the United States such as the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Financial Accounting Standard Board (FASB), and the General Accounting Office (GAO). Materiality was defined by FASB Concepts Statement No. 2, Qualitative Characteristics of Accounting Information (Para. 132, 1980) as follows: "The magnitude of an omission or mis-statement of accounting information that, in the light of surrounding circumstances, makes it probable that the judgment of a reasonable person relying on the information would have been changed or influenced by the omission or mis-statement"(Juma'h, 2009).
Classification of materiality
What a company releases or discloses on the 'face' of its financial statements is a decision involving limitations as to the amount or extent of information to be disclosed; this also applies for notes. In the first place, a comprehensive inclusion of all economic events affecting a particular business would result in an enormous glut of unnecessary material that is likely to present a false impression of the company to the stakeholders reading the financial statements. Simultaneously, however, the professional accountant is aware that choice of the 'adequate' method for presentation of economic information, or failure to fully disclose certain events of economic significance might mislead financial statement users. An obvious point is that the materiality purview of stakeholders and users of financial statements is potentially distinct from such materiality purview of accountants (Juma'h, 2009)
When materiality guidance is discussed, specific language addresses implied likelihood, in terms of the extent to which this information might influence the judgment of a 'reasonable person': probable, likely to influence, reasonably influence, possible, extremely unlikely, and remote (Price and Wallace, 2001, 2002). In considering the materiality of an event, an accountant's judgment is of critical importance. When an accountant considers these factors, measurements, both qualitative and quantitative, must consider aggregate base, type, and circumstances (Juma'h, 2009).
The Relevance of Materiality to Professional Accounting
Precisely what will be disclosed in a financial statement is determined by materiality, and ergo, the judgments exercised concerning materiality determine the content of financial statements. To evaluate whether financial statements are in concurrence with general accounting principles and are fair, materiality becomes relevant, as well as during the design and planning of auditing protocols. The act of auditing involves assessing the detecting of misstatements at an acceptable level, which is accomplished by testing sample items or transactions. The choice of the materiality level determines the extent of testing for auditory application (Brennan & Gray, 2005). The materiality level to be used in auditing financial statements and presenting such statements is selected at the start of the annual reporting cycle for financial audits. Auditors and company management will select the materiality level independently, generally with upper management making the primary decision. Ideally, the materiality decision by the management is independent of the materiality choice of the auditors; this materiality decision is then used by management to prepare financial statements. Some have argued that the precise 'order' of this process is important...
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