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Internal Control: A Preventive Maintenance Program
Friday, 05.18.2007, 10:46am (GMT)
You read about this in every newspaper in every town in the
entire country: Some bookkeeper, trusted by the owner of a small business,
embezzles thousands of dollars. If the theft doesn’t put owner out of business,
it certainly causes a major headache.
The reason we hear of these cases
so often is that, in a small business, there may only be the owner and a
bookkeeper. The owner doesn’t like doing the books, doesn’t understand them, and
relies on this one person to take care of things. The bookkeeper, who is usually
having personal financial difficulties, takes a small amount of money intending
to pay it back. No one seems to notice, so more is taken. Over a period of time,
it starts to mount up to a lot of money.
This is where the concept of
“internal control” comes in. Essentially, every business should have, at some
level, an internal control system in place to protect against losses, both
intentional and unintentional. This is because “internal control” systems will:
1) protect cash and other assets; 2) promote efficiency in processing
transactions; and, 3) ensure reliability of financial records. An internal
control system consists primarily of policies and procedures designed to provide
reasonable assurance that these three objectives will be achieved. The size and
complexity of the business will determine the extent of the internal control
system.
Regardless of size, one of the most important aspects of an
internal control system is the concept of separation of duties. Separating
duties makes it more difficult for theft and errors to go undetected. It is
highly unusual for two employees to “collude” in an effort to steal from the
company.
I worked as an internal auditor for a newspaper chain for three
years. My job was to walk in to the newspaper offices unannounced and go
directly to the cash boxes, count them, and verify receipts. One of my most
important audit steps was to make sure the internal control procedures were in
place and working properly. Here are a few suggestions for internal control
procedures regarding handling of cash:
- Allow only specific designated
individuals to handle cash.
- Give responsibility for bookkeeping to an
individual who does not handle cash.
- Use numbered receipts to document
all payments.
- Make all bank deposits promptly.
- The person
who prepares the bank reconciliation should be different than the one handling
cash.
- If possible, the person who makes the bank deposit should be
different than the one who handles the cash and the one who prepares the bank
reconciliation.
- Make deposits intact with no amounts withdrawn to pay
expenses.
- Keep cash and checkbook in a locked drawer or cash register.
- Since tills will never be 100 orrect all the time, establish a
tolerance level for overages and shortages to determine the point at which
corrective measures will be triggered.
- Make all disbursements by
check, except minimal amounts paid from petty cash.
- Make certain every
payment is related to a paper document, such as a voucher, to ensure that a
paper trail exists for all disbursements.
- Conduct random surprise
counts of petty cash and cash drawers.
- Count inventory and other
assets frequently and compare with company books.
An internal control
system set up early as a preventative measure is more efficient than
establishing a corrective system in reaction to a loss. If it so happens, that
there is just you and the bookkeeper in your small business, you need to learn
how to do some of the bookkeeping tasks so you can spot check the bookkeeper’s
work. That, in itself, is an excellent preventative measure.
About the
author: John W. Day, MBA is the author of two courses in accounting basics:
Real Life Accounting for Non-Accountants (20-hr online) and The HEART of
Accounting (4-hr PDF). Visit his website at http://www.reallifeaccounting.comto download for FREE his 3
e-books pertaining to small business accounting and his monthly newsletter on
accounting issues.
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