PSA 220 Quality Control For Audits of Historical Financial Information
PSA 220 Quality Control For Audits of Historical Financial Information
PSA 220 Quality Control For Audits of Historical Financial Information
Purpose
- To establish standards and provide guidance on specific responsibilities of firm personnel regarding
quality control procedures for audits of historical financial information including audits of financial
statements
Engagement team
- All personnel performing an audit engagement, including any experts contracted by the firm in connection
with that audit engagement
- They:
a) Implement quality control procedures that are applicable to the audit engagement
b) Provide the firm with relevant information to enable the functioning of that part of the firm’s system of
quality control relating to independence
c) Are entitled to rely on the firm’s systems unless information provided by the firm or other parties
suggest otherwise
Firm
- A sole practitioner, or partnership, or other entity of professional accountants
Ethical Requirements
- The engagement partner should consider whether member of the engagement team have complied with
ethical requirements
- Fundamental principles of professional ethics:
a. Integrity d. Confidentiality
b. Objectivity e. Professional behavior
c. Professional competence and due care
- Independence
o The engagement partner should:
1. Obtain relevant information from the firm and, where applicable, network firms, to identify and
evaluate circumstances and relationships that create threats to independence
Network firm – an entity under common control, ownership or management with the firm
of any entity that a reasonable and informed third party having knowledge of all relevant
information would reasonably conclude as being part of the firm nationally or
internationally
2. Evaluate information on identified breaches, if any, of the firm’s independence policies and
procedures to determine whether they create a threat to independence for the audit
engagement
3. Take appropriate action to eliminate such threats or reduce them to an acceptable level by
applying the standards. The engagement partner should promptly report to the firm any failure
to resolve the matter for appropriate action
4. Document conclusions on independence and any relevant discussions with the firm that
support these conclusions
If engagement partner cannot eliminate the threat to independence or reduce it to an
acceptable level, he will have to consult with the firm to determine appropriate action,
which may include eliminating the activity or interest that creates the threat, or withdrawing
from the audit engagement (in which shall be documented)
Engagement Performance
- Engagement partner should take responsibility for the direction, supervision and performance of the audit
engagement in compliance with professional standards and regulatory and legal requirements and for
the auditor’s report that is issued to be appropriate in the circumstances
- Engagement partner should inform his members of:
a. Their responsibilities
o Which includes:
Maintaining an objective state of mind
Maintaining an appropriate level of professional skepticism
Performing work delegated to them with due care
b. The nature of the entity’s business
c. Risk-related issues
d. Problems that may arise
e. The detailed approach to the performance of the engagement
- There should be appropriate communication and appropriate team-working and training
o Members are encouraged to raise questions with more experienced members
o Should assist less experience members of the engagement team to clearly understand the
objectives of their assigned work
- Supervision includes:
o Tracking the progress of the audit engagement
o Considering the capabilities and competence of individual members of the engagement team
o Addressing significant issues arising during the audit engagement, considering the significance
and modifying the approach appropriately
o Identifying matter for consultation or consideration by more experienced engagement team
members during the audit engagement
- Review Responsibilities
o More experienced team members review work performed by less experienced member
o Reviewers consider whether:
a. The work has been performed in accordance with professional standards and regulatory and
legal requirements;
b. Significant matters have been raised for further consideration;
c. Appropriate consultations have taken place and the resulting conclusions have been
documented and implemented;
d. There is a need to revise the nature, timing and extent of work performed;
e. The work performed supports the conclusions reached and is appropriately documented;
f. The evidence obtained is sufficient and appropriate to support the auditor’s report; and
g. The objectives of the engagement procedures have been achieved.
o Engagement partner should conduct timely reviews at appropriate stages of the engagements so
that significant matters can be resolved before the auditor’s report is issued
o Note: If a new engagement partner takes over an audit during the engagement, he should review
the work performed to the date of the change
Consultation
- The engagement partner should:
a. Be responsible for the engagement team undertaking appropriate consultation on difficult or
contentious matters;
b. Be satisfied that members of the engagement team have undertaken appropriate consultation during
the course of the engagement, both within the engagement team and between the engagement team
and others at the appropriate level within or outside the firm;
c. Be satisfied that the nature and scope of, and conclusions resulting from, such consultations are
documented and agreed with the party consulted; and
d. Determine that conclusions resulting from consultations have been implemented.
- Effective consolation with other professionals
o Requires that all relevant facts are given to enable them to provide advice
o May consult with individuals with appropriate knowledge, seniority, experience within or outside
firm
Suitably qualified external person – an individual outside the frim with the capabilities and
competence to act as an engagement partner of either a professional accountancy body
whose member may perform audits of historical financial information or of an organization
that provides relevant quality control services
- Consultations must be documented and must be agreed by both individual seeking consultation and the
one consulted. It must be sufficiently complete and detailed to enable an understanding of:
a. The issue on which consultation was sought
b. The results of the consultation, including any decision taken, the basis for those decisions and how
they were implemented
Differences of Opinion
- Where differences of opinion arise within the engagement team, with those consulted and, where
applicable, between the engagement partner and the engagement quality control reviewer, the
engagement team should follow the firm’s policies and procedures for dealing with and resolving
differences of opinion.
Monitoring
- A process comprising an ongoing consideration and evaluation of the firm’s system of quality control,
including a periodic inspection of a selection of completed engagements, designed to enable the firm to
obtain reasonable assurance that its system of quality control is operating effectively
- Firm should establish policies and procedures designed to provide it with reasonable assurance that the
policies and procedures relating to the system of quality control are relevant, adequate, operating
effectively and complied with in practice
- The engagement partner considers:
(a) Whether deficiencies noted in that information may affect the audit engagement; and
(b) Whether the measures the firm took to rectify the situation are sufficient in the context of that audit.