International Organization of Supreme Audit Institutions

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International Organization of Supreme Audit Institutions
HeadquartersVienna, Austria
Secretary General
Margit Kraker[1]
Websitewww.intosai.org
INTOSAI 50 Years report

The International Organization of Supreme Audit Institutions (INTOSAI) is an intergovernmental organization whose members are supreme audit institutions. Nearly every supreme audit institution in the world is a member of INTOSAI. Depending on the type of system used in their home country, the members of INTOSAI may be variously titled the Chief Financial Controller, the Office of the Comptroller General, the Office of the Auditor General, the Court of Accounts, or the Board of Audit.

INTOSAI holds a triennial conference entitled the

International Congress of Supreme Audit Institutions (INCOSAI).[2]
It publishes the quarterly International Journal of Government Auditing and publishes guidelines and international standards on auditing.

History

INTOSAI was founded in 1953

Havana, Cuba.[4] Thirty-four audit organizations formed the group originally and as of 2010 the current membership includes 193 institutions (188 national institutions, the European Court of Auditors and 4 associated members).[3]

The members of INTOSAI are the primary

external auditors of the United Nations.[4] The UN's General Assembly appoints the UN Board of Auditors (3 members appointed for 6 years) among the INTOSAI member representatives.[5]

The ISSAIs, International Standards of Supreme Audit Institutions

The International Standards of Supreme Audit Institutions (ISSAI) are a

public entities
(External Audit Standards for public entities).

The "INTOSAI Auditing Standards" had been approved by the INCOSAI in 1998 and updated in 2001. In its strategic plan 2005–2010, the INTOSAI decided to "provide an up-to-date framework of professional standards", so the INTOSAI Professional Standards Committee decided to merge the existing and new INTOSAI standards and guidelines into a framework.

The framework comprises all documents endorsed by INCOSAI with the purpose of guiding the professional standards used by SAIs

The list of ISSAIs is in the table below:

Hierarchical level of the text ISSAI series Name Notes and Links www.intosai.org and www.issai.org)
Level 1: Founding Principles ISSAI 1 The Lima Declaration (endorsed 1977) Comprehensive precepts on auditing in the public sector|
Level 2: Prerequisites ISSAI 10-40 Prerequisites for the Functioning of Supreme Audit Institutions * The 'ISSAI 30'
Generally accepted auditing standards
)|
Level 3: Fundamental Auditing Principles ISSAI 100-400 Basic Principles, General Standards, Field Standards (endorsed 2001), and Reporting Standards
Level 4: Auditing Guidelines ISSAI 1000-1810
Financial Audit
Guidelines
Financial_Audit_Guidelines_E.pdf
ISSAI 3000-3100 Performance Audit Guidelines
ISSAI 4000-4200
Compliance Audit
Guidelines
ISSAI 5000-5010 Guidelines on auditing International Institutions
ISSAI 5100-5140 Guidelines on Environmental Audit
ISSAI 5200-5240 Guidelines on Privatisation
ISSAI 5300-5399 guidelines on IT-audit
ISSAI 5400-5499 Guidelines on Audit of Public Debt
ISSAI 5500-5599 Guidelines on Audit of Disaster-related Aid
ISSAI 5600-5699 Guidelines on Peer Reviews
Guidance for Good governance INTOSAI GOVs 9100 - 9230
Internal Control
and Accounting Standards
www.issai.org/media(891,1033)/Internal_Control_Standards.pdf

The three main types of public-sector audit

Financial Audit

Financial audit focuses on determining whether an entity’s financial information is presented in accordance with the applicable financial reporting and regulatory framework. This is accomplished by obtaining sufficient and appropriate audit evidence to enable the auditor to express an opinion as to whether the financial information is free from material misstatement due to fraud or error.

Performance Audit

Performance audit focuses on whether interventions, programmes and institutions are performing in accordance with the principles of economy, efficiency and effectiveness and whether there is room for improvement. Performance is examined against suitable criteria, and the causes of deviations from those criteria or other problems are analysed. The aim is to answer key audit questions and to provide recommendations for improvement.

Compliance Audit

Compliance audit
focuses on whether a particular subject matter is in compliance with authorities identified as criteria. Compliance auditing is performed by assessing whether activities, financial transactions and information are, in all material respects, in compliance with the authorities which govern the audited entity. These authorities may include rules, laws and regulations, budgetary resolutions, policy, established codes, agreed terms or the general principles governing sound public sector financial management and the conduct of public officials.

Examples of publications

Examples of its major publications are:

Adoption by intergovernmental organizations

In addition to the INTOSAI members (the

intergovernmental organizations
have adopted INTOSAI AS:

  • Council of Europe
  • European Communities
    • The
      European Community context.[6]
  • European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
    • Audit by two appointed
      Supreme Audit Institutions
      .
  • European Space Agency
    • Audit by an Audit Board composed of
      Supreme Audit Institutions
      auditors.
  • EUMETSAT
    • Audit by an appointed
      Supreme Audit Institution
      .
  • International Criminal Police Organization
  • North Atlantic Treaty Organization
  • Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
    • Audit by a
      Supreme Audit Institution
      .
  • The United Nations
    • The
      Supreme Audit Institutions chairmen, familiar with and usually using the INTOSAI Auditing Standards.[8]

INTOSAI and Internal Audit

The

public entities
.

The guidance "INTOSAI GOV 9100" states:

Regional working groups

List of INTOSAI Conferences

INCOSAI Place Date Host Information
I Havana, Cuba November 1953 Ministry of Auditing and Control of the Republic of Cuba
II Brussels, Belgium September 1956 Court of Audit of Belgium
III Rio de Janeiro, Brazil May 1959 Tribunal de Contas da União
IV Vienna, Austria May 1962 Court of Audit of the Republic of Austria
V Jerusalem, Israel June 1965 State Comptroller's Office of Israel
VI Tokyo, Japan May 1968
Board of Audit of Japan
VII Montreal, Canada September 1971 Office of the Auditor General of Canada
VIII Madrid, Spain May 1974
Tribunal de Cuentas
IX Lima, Peru October 1977 Contraloría General de la República del Perú
X Nairobi, Kenya June 1980 Office of the Comptroller and Auditor General of Kenya
XI Manila, Philippines April 1983
Philippine Commission on Audit
XII Sydney, Australia April 1986 Australian National Audit Office
XIII Berlin, Germany June 1989 Bundesrechnungshof
German commemorative stamp from XIII INCOSAI
XIV Washington, D.C., U.S. October 1992 Government Accountability Office
XV Cairo, Egypt September - October 1995 Central Auditing Organization of Egypt
XVI Montevideo, Uruguay November 1998 Contraloría General de la República del Uruguay
XVII Seoul, South Korea October 2001 Board of Audit and Inspection of Korea
XVIII Budapest, Hungary October 2004 Hungarian State Audit Office
XIX Mexico City, Mexico November 2007 Contraloría General de la República de Mexico https://web.archive.org/web/20081007173620/http://www.incosai2007.org.mx/
XX Johannesburg, South Africa November 2010
Auditor-General of South Africa
http://www.incosai.co.za/en/
XXI
PR China
October 2013
National Audit Office of the People's Republic of China
XXII Abu Dhabi, UAE December 2016 State Audit Institution of United Arab Emirates http://www.incosai2016.ae
XXIII Moscow, Russia September 2019
Accounts Chamber of the Russian Federation
https://incosai2019.ru/en

Memberships

The following supreme audit institution are members of INTOSAI:[9]

Full Members

Supranational Organisations

Associate Members

See also

References

  1. ^ "Margit Kraker". International Organization of Supreme Audit Institutions. Archived from the original on 13 December 2017. Retrieved 14 March 2019.
  2. OCLC 77116846
  3. ^ a b
    OCLC 57573800
  4. ^ a b
    OCLC 62895793
  5. ^ "United Nations Board of Auditors".
  6. ^ "Audit". Archived from the original on 14 October 2009. Retrieved 22 August 2010.
  7. ^ "United Nations Board of Auditors".
  8. ^ The INTOSAI Financial Audit Guidelines will be based on the International Standards on Auditing (ISA) issued by the IAASB http://www.afrosai-e.org.za/HOME/Menu/TechnicalAdvancement/INTOSAIauditingstandards/tabid/82/Default.aspx
  9. ^ a b Official membership list https://www.intosai.org/about-us/members

External links