Stopping hamburglars: applying effective internal control

Understanding effective internal control is vital for accounting and business students. Examples of fraud and loss through poor internal control are widespread in practice. The learning objectives of this teaching case focus on improving students’ ability to comprehensively evaluate internal control...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Soonawalla, K, Wakefield, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: American Accounting Association 2024
_version_ 1811140003290415104
author Soonawalla, K
Wakefield, J
author_facet Soonawalla, K
Wakefield, J
author_sort Soonawalla, K
collection OXFORD
description Understanding effective internal control is vital for accounting and business students. Examples of fraud and loss through poor internal control are widespread in practice. The learning objectives of this teaching case focus on improving students’ ability to comprehensively evaluate internal control practices and suggest and justify new practices where applicable. The McDonald’s Monopoly fraud is a real-life example of a situation where multiple internal control failures had substantial financial and reputational consequences for McDonald’s, particularly its outsourcing partners involved in operationalizing the monopoly game. We use this factual case to illustrate control system shortcomings, allowing students to evaluate internal control and suggest internal control techniques with reference to all five components of the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO) Internal Control-Integrated Framework.
first_indexed 2024-09-25T04:15:04Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:2fce6717-11ed-4f89-be74-a91c395ea8aa
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-25T04:15:04Z
publishDate 2024
publisher American Accounting Association
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:2fce6717-11ed-4f89-be74-a91c395ea8aa2024-07-16T11:08:14ZStopping hamburglars: applying effective internal controlJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:2fce6717-11ed-4f89-be74-a91c395ea8aaEnglishSymplectic ElementsAmerican Accounting Association2024Soonawalla, KWakefield, JUnderstanding effective internal control is vital for accounting and business students. Examples of fraud and loss through poor internal control are widespread in practice. The learning objectives of this teaching case focus on improving students’ ability to comprehensively evaluate internal control practices and suggest and justify new practices where applicable. The McDonald’s Monopoly fraud is a real-life example of a situation where multiple internal control failures had substantial financial and reputational consequences for McDonald’s, particularly its outsourcing partners involved in operationalizing the monopoly game. We use this factual case to illustrate control system shortcomings, allowing students to evaluate internal control and suggest internal control techniques with reference to all five components of the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO) Internal Control-Integrated Framework.
spellingShingle Soonawalla, K
Wakefield, J
Stopping hamburglars: applying effective internal control
title Stopping hamburglars: applying effective internal control
title_full Stopping hamburglars: applying effective internal control
title_fullStr Stopping hamburglars: applying effective internal control
title_full_unstemmed Stopping hamburglars: applying effective internal control
title_short Stopping hamburglars: applying effective internal control
title_sort stopping hamburglars applying effective internal control
work_keys_str_mv AT soonawallak stoppinghamburglarsapplyingeffectiveinternalcontrol
AT wakefieldj stoppinghamburglarsapplyingeffectiveinternalcontrol