Question

Following are three different situations with respect to the audit of accounts receivable and sales. For each, specify the evidence mix that you would use (tests of control, substantive tests, type of confirmation/timing), and explain why.

A) The client is in a volatile industry, selling products that can quickly become technically obsolete. Total accounts receivable is $65 million, with a bad debt allowance of $7 million. The company has recently laid off three accounting staff to save money.

B) A small company has 45 different customers, with balances ranging from $500 to $25,000 per customer. There is one accountant on staff, and a professional accountant comes in once per week for three hours to review the work and prepare journal entries. Bad debts are rare, as the owner is actively involved in accounts receivable collection.

C) Big Department Store Finance Corporation has fifty staff in the accounting department, a sophisticated software package, and about $250 million in accounts receivable. The corporation manages the department store credit cards. About 100,000 credit card customers have balances less than $300 on their accounts, while the balances for the remaining customers range up to a maximum of $5,000.

Answer

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