Wednesday, November 30, 2011

About the Community Video Archive


The Internet Archive contains a section on Moving Images which is called “Community Video.” It was originally named “Open Source Video.” At present, this archive contains 149,895 items. Everyone is invited to view or upload videos to the Community collection.

Contributed by Archive users and community members, these videos are available for free download. Users can browse by title, author, collection, subject/keywords, language, date and creator. An RSS feed is also available. For a sample, see the “Earth Time Lapse View from Space” (5 minutes) which is also embeded below for ease of access.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

CICA - Materiality in Auditing: An Audit Technique Study (1965)


In 1965, the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) first published Materiality in Auditing: An Audit Technique Study. The Foreword to that study notes that: “One of the basic problems in conducting an audit is determining the extent of the examination. While the auditor must ensure that his examination has been in sufficient breadth and depth to warrant the expression of opinion on his client’s financial statements, he must plan his audit program wisely so that the cost of the service to the client is not excessive. Materiality plays an extremely important part in reconciling these two objectives."



"Although materiality has almost become a by-word in the profession, very little has been published to assist the auditor in applying the underlying concept to a particular situation. The Study Group, therefore, felt that this topic should be dealt with first, before proceeding to other topics of interest. The study should be of immediate interest to the members of the profession in public practice and should be a useful reference as future studies are published.”

“The reader should realize that this study discusses the concept of materiality primarily in relation to its effect on auditing procedures. The discussion has necessarily included some reference to the accounting consequences of materiality. But, the complex subject of accounting materiality as a whole - for instance as applied to consistency, classification or disclosure on financial statements - has not been dealt with.

“The members of the Study Group recognized at the outset that the application of the materiality concept rests on judgment - mature judgment based on experience. The consensus of the experience of the group has resulted in a series of guidelines which should be of help to the auditor. These guidelines are offered, not as substitutes for professional judgment but rather as stimulants to the reader by bringing to his attention the factors he should take into account in formulating his judgment.”

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

A Brief History of the Evolution of Accounting and Auditing Standards in Canada

Prior to 1951, the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) was known as the Dominion Association of Chartered Accountants (DACA). It established an Accounting and Auditing Research Committee in 1946, which began issuing a series of bulletins setting out recommended standards of practice on accounting and auditing.


In 1968, it replaced the series of bulletins with a loose-leaf, subject-indexed Handbook that was periodically updated with inserts as the CICA’s committee issued new recommendations. Although the bulletins set out what the committee “considers to be the best accepted practice or its suggested treatment of new elements in accounting statements arising as a result of changes in social or economic conditions,” the recommendations contained in the Handbook were intended to possess greater force. Section 1500.06 in the Handbook, issued in November 1969, stated that any departures from the Handbook recommendations “should be explained in notes to the financial statements with an indication of the reason why the recommendation concerned was not followed.”

In 1975, the Canada Business Corporations Act added a degree of quasi-legislative authority to the Handbook, when Regulations 44 and 45 of the Act proclaimed:

44) The financial statements referred to in paragraph 149(1) of the Act shall, except as otherwise provided by this Part, be prepared in accordance with the standards, as they exist from time to time, of the CICA set out in the Handbook.

45) The auditor’s report referred to in Section 163 of the Act shall, except as otherwise provided by this Part, be prepared in accordance with the standards of the CICA set out in the Handbook.

In 1963, the CICA began publishing research studies on contemporary accounting and auditing topics. Since 1980, it has published a number of research studies on accounting and financial reporting, on auditing and assurance, and on environmental and performance reporting. Most are available as PDF downloads free-of-charge.

In 1991, the CICA replaced the Accounting Standards Committee and the Auditing Standards Committee with the Accounting Standards Board (AcSB) and the Auditing Standards Board. Later in that decade, the CICA Task Force on Standard Setting released its final report in May 1998, and among its recommendations was the establishment of an “independent standard setting organization for Canada.”

In addition, the CICA established the Accounting Standards Oversight Council (AcSOC) to support the setting of accounting standards domestically and to contribute to the development of internationally accepted standards. AcSOC’s mandate also includes providing opportunities for the public to comment on all aspects of accounting standard setting, and reporting to the public annually.

In 2005, a firm commitment was made to adopt International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), effective January 1, 2011. IFRS have now been incorporated into the CICA Handbook, along with International Auditing Standards (IAS).

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

The Official Duties of Chartered Accountants - 1891

A lecture called “The Official Duties of Chartered Accountants” was read before the Manchester Chartered Accountants' Students' Society on May 4, 1891. According to that lecture, the duties of a Chartered Accountant may be divided into three classes: Private, Public, and Official.


“By private duties I mean such as are due by a Chartered Accountant to his client when he is instructed to perform an audit or an investigation on behalf of a private association, a firm, or on behalf of individuals, either in their business or private capacity. His duty is then strictly confined to carrying out the instructions of his clients to the best of his professional skill and ability; when he has performed these his responsibilities are at an end.”

“The public duties of a Chartered Accountant have reference to those cases where he acts on behalf of persons who give him general but not definite instructions, and who leave him to carry them out according to his own ideas, in the full belief that he will do his duty in the interest of all concerned, and hold him responsible for so acting. These duties are such as are undertaken by accepting the appointment of Auditor of a public company, of voluntary Liquidator of a company, of Auditor of the accounts of a deceased person's estate on behalf of those interested, either in the division of the estate or in the income derived from investment of the same, and of an Arbitrator, while the official duties are those appertaining to offices or appointments held under the Courts of Justice, whether of the Chancery Division or the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice, or under the County Courts, and under the Board of Trade.”

“It is with the last class of duties that my lecture is concerned. The appointments under the Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice are those of Receiver, Receiver and Manager, Provisional Liquidator, Voluntary Liquidator under supervision of the Court, and Liquidator; the appointment under the control of the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice is that of Trustee in Bankruptcy. Under the Board of Trade, a Chartered Accountant may receive the special appointment as a skilled Accountant to assist a debtor against whom a Receiving Order under the Bankruptcy Act of 1883 has been made, in the preparation of his statement of affairs, and also to assist the directors or other officials of a company, after an order for winding it up has been made by the Court, in the preparation of a statement of affairs. He may also be appointed the Special Manager of the business of a debtor from the date of the Receiving Order until the appointment of, or rather certification of, a Trustee, or the approval of a scheme, and also the Special Manager of a company after a Winding-up Order has been made by the Court.”

(The full lecture about “The Official Duties of Chartered Accountants - 1891” is available online at Google Docs.)