Reference no: EM133306644
Question
What internal control procedure(s) would best prevent or detect the following problems?
A. A production order was initiated for a product that was already overstocked in the company's warehouse.
B. A production employee stole items of work-in-process inventory.
C. The "rush-order" tag on a partially completed production job became detached from the materials and lost, resulting in a costly delay.
D. A production employee entered a materials requisition form into the system in order to steal $300 worth of parts from the raw materials storeroom.
E. A production worker entering job-time data on an online terminal mistakenly entered 3,000 instead of 300 in the "quantity-completed" field.
F. A production worker entering job-time data on an online terminal mistakenly posted the completion of operation 562 to production order 7569 instead of production order 7596.
G. A parts storeroom clerk issued parts in quantities 10% lower than those indicated on several materials requisitions and stole the excess quantities.
H. A production manager stole several expensive machines and covered up the loss by submitting a form to the accounting department indicating that the missing machines were obsolete and should be written off as worthless.
I. The quantity-on-hand balance for a key component shows a negative balance.
J. A factory supervisor accessed the operations list file and inflated the standards for work completed in his department. Consequently, future performance reports show favorable budget variances for that department.
K. A factory supervisor wrote off a robotic assembly machine as being sold for salvage but actually sold the machine and pocketed the proceeds.
L. Overproduction of a slow-moving product resulted in excessive inventory that had to eventually be marked down and sold at a loss.