
Professional ethics are moral principles and conduct rules that guide the behaviour of professionals while performing their duties.
In auditing, ethics matters because users trust the auditor’s opinion. If ethics fails, audit quality and credibility collapse.
Common fundamental principles (explain briefly in exams):
Tip: Even if your syllabus uses a slightly different list, the exam expects the meaning + 1 line explanation.
Independence means the auditor is free from influences that compromise professional judgement.
Independence has two practical angles:
Why it is important:
Common threats:
In answers, write 2–3 threats with simple examples.
Safeguards include:
Best exam point: “Apply safeguards or withdraw from engagement if threats cannot be reduced to an acceptable level.”
Confidentiality means client information must not be disclosed or used for personal advantage.
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Fundamental principles (any three):
Write 1 line meaning for each in exams.
Independence means freedom from influences that compromise judgement. It includes:
It is essential for credibility of the audit opinion.
Financial auditing is the process of examining an organization's (or individual's) financial records to determine if they are accurate and in accordance with any applicable rules (including accepted accounting standards), regulations, and laws.
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Professional ethics are moral principles and conduct rules that guide the behaviour of professionals while performing their duties.
In auditing, ethics matters because users trust the auditor’s opinion. If ethics fails, audit quality and credibility collapse.
Common fundamental principles (explain briefly in exams):
Tip: Even if your syllabus uses a slightly different list, the exam expects the meaning + 1 line explanation.
Independence means the auditor is free from influences that compromise professional judgement.
Independence has two practical angles:
Why it is important:
Common threats:
In answers, write 2–3 threats with simple examples.
Safeguards include:
Best exam point: “Apply safeguards or withdraw from engagement if threats cannot be reduced to an acceptable level.”
Confidentiality means client information must not be disclosed or used for personal advantage.
Exceptions (disclosure may be allowed/required):
Even in exceptions, the auditor should disclose only what is necessary and follow proper procedure.
Due care means the auditor performs work with diligence, skill, and proper attention.
It includes:
A key line for exams: “Due care ensures audit risk is reduced to an acceptably low level.”
Professional scepticism means a questioning mind and alertness to conditions indicating possible misstatement.
Why important:
So auditors must corroborate evidence and not accept explanations blindly.
Audit standards provide a uniform framework for:
Standards help define what “good audit work” means.
Typical audit flow:
Note: This is an overview; your exam answers should link ethics to each step (e.g., independence at acceptance stage).
Independence check → Accept engagement → Plan with due care → Gather evidence with scepticism
→ Document properly → Report objectively → Maintain confidentiality
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Independence means the auditor is free from influences that compromise professional judgement.
Types:
Threats and safeguards (examples):
Identify threat → Evaluate significance → Apply safeguards → If not acceptable → Withdraw
Thus independence is essential for credibility of audit opinion.