Preventing And Detecting Financial Reporting Fraud

This course discusses how antifraud policies, programs, and procedures should be designed to deter, prevent fraud.

Last updated 2022-01-10 | 4.2

- Explore the significance of financial reporting fraud.
- Recognize the causes and consequences of financial reporting fraud.
- Identify the antifraud roles and practices of corporate gatekeepers including the board of directors
- management
- regulators
- internal auditors
- and external auditors.

What you'll learn

Explore the significance of financial reporting fraud.
Recognize the causes and consequences of financial reporting fraud.
Identify the antifraud roles and practices of corporate gatekeepers including the board of directors
management
regulators
internal auditors
and external auditors.
Discover the role of corporate culture
control structure
and antifraud procedures in preventing and detecting financial reporting fraud.
Recognize the importance of forensic-related audit procedures and forensic accounting education/training.
Explore the significance of corporate governance and ethics education/training.
Explore the role of corporate culture
control structure
and antifraud procedures in preventing financial scandals.

* Requirements

* No Advanced Preparation or Prerequisites are needed for this course
* but completion of the other courses in this series will be helpful.

Description

Companies of all sizes are susceptible to employee fraud including embezzlements, thefts, and misappropriations of assets as well as Financial Reporting Fraud (FRF), also known as “cooking the books”, in order to show a rosy picture of the company so that it appears more attractive to investors than it really is. The 2016 Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE) Report to the Nations reveals that the “typical organization loses 5% of revenues in a given year as a result of fraud, which exceeded $6.3 billion, with an average loss per case of $2.7 million”.

This can occur in situations where there are unexplained accounting anomalies, unusually rapid revenue or profit growth, weak internal controls, and aggressive financial actions by senior management, among other things. The existence and persistence of FRF has undermined the integrity and reliability of public financial information, eroded investor confidence, and has had detrimental effects on the safety, soundness, and efficiency of financial markets worldwide. The very viability of the business as well as the safety of financial markets in general are threatened when the existence and persistence of FRF go undetected.

Financial reporting fraud can be detected with effective corporate governance, which includes effective antifraud policies and programs by the board of directors, management, and auditors. Effective antifraud programs, —focusing on fraud awareness and education in the workplace environment, whistle-blowing policies and procedures of encouraging employees to report suspicious behavior without fear of reprisals, adequate internal control procedures designed to prevent and detect fraud, and conducting surprise audits—are all examples of actions that the board of directors, management, and other corporate gatekeepers can take to significantly reduce FRF.

Please join Zabihollah (Zabi) Rezaee, noted educator, author, and speaker as he discusses how antifraud policies, programs, and procedures should be designed to deter, prevent, and detect financial reporting fraud. Dr. Rezaee offers insights concerning the role of ethics and corporate governance in forensic accounting education and practice, including a discussion of corporate culture, control structure, and fraud procedures designed to detect financial reporting fraud before irreparable damage has been done.

Who this course is for:

  • Anyone interested in Accounting, Finance, Business or related fields.

Course content

3 sections • 17 lectures

Introduction to Preventing and Detecting Financial Reporting Fraud Preview 01:37

Definition of Fraud Preview 15:44

Cost of Fraud Preview 09:55

Cost of Fraud (Continued) Preview 14:16

Forensic Accounting Preview 06:33

Elements of Fraud Preview 10:47

Elements of Fraud (Continued) Preview 11:40

Fraud Symptoms Preview 10:37

Fraud Detection Preview 11:11

Fraud Detection (Continued) Preview 09:19

Forensic Audit Procedures Preview 12:00

Prevention, Detection, Correction of FSF Preview 12:14

Course Conclusion Preview 05:29

Slides: Preventing and Detecting Financial Reporting Fraud Preview 00:01

Preventing and Detecting Financial Reporting Fraud Glossary/Index Preview 00:01

Review Questions

Review Questions: Preventing and Detecting Financial Reporting Fraud

FINAL EXAM

FINAL EXAM: Preventing and Detecting Financial Reporting Fraud