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Day 20 of One Month to More Effective Internal Controls – Assessing Compliance Internal Controls Under COSO

Internal Controls – Integrated Framework, Illustrative Tools for Assessing Effectiveness of a System of Internal Controls” (herein ‘the Illustrative Guide’), COSO laid out its views on “how to assess the effectiveness of its internal controls.” It went on to note, “An effective system of internal controls provides reasonable assurance of achievement of the entity’s objectives, relating to operations, reporting, and compliance.” Moreover, two over-arching requirements can only be met through such a structured post. First, each of the five components is present and functioning. Second, are the five components “operating together in an integrated approach.” One of the most critical components of the COSO Framework is that it sets internal control standards against those you can audit to assess the strength of your compliance with internal control. As the COSO 2013 Framework is designed to apply to a wider variety of corporate entities, your audit should be designed to test your internal controls. If you have a multi-country or business unit organization, you must determine how your internal compliance controls are interrelated up and down the organization. The Illustrative Guide also realizes that smaller companies may have less formal structures in place throughout the organization. Your auditing can and should reflect this business reality. Finally, if your company relies heavily on technology for your compliance function, you can leverage that technology to “support the ongoing assessment and evaluation” program going forward. The Illustrative Guide suggests using a four-pronged approach in your assessment. (1) Make an overall assessment of your company’s system of internal controls. This should include an analysis of “whether each of the components and relevant principles is present and functioning and the components are operating together in an integrated manner.” (2). There should be a component evaluation. Here you need to evaluate any deficiencies you may have more deeply and whether there are any compensating internal controls. (3) Assess whether each principle is present and functioning. As the COSO 2013 Framework does not prescribe “specific controls that must be selected, developed and deployed,” your task here is to look at the main characteristics of each principle, as further defined in the points of focus, and then determine if a deficiency exists and it so what is the severity of the deficiency. (4) Finally, you should summarize all your internal control deficiencies in a log, so they are addressed on a structured basis. Another way to think through the approach could be to consider “the controls to effect the principle” and would allow internal control deficiencies to be “identified along with an initial severity determination.” A Component Evaluation would “roll up the results of the component’s principal evaluations” and would allow a re-evaluation of the severity of any deficiency in the context of compensating controls. Lastly, an overall Effectiveness Assessment would examine whether the controls were “operating together in an integrated manner by evaluating any internal control deficiencies aggregate to a major deficiency.” This process would then lend itself to an ongoing evaluation. If business models, laws, regulations, or other situations changed, you could assess if your internal controls were up to the new situations or needed adjustment. The Illustrative Guide spent a fair amount of time discussing deficiencies. Initially, it defined ‘internal control deficiency’ as a “shortcoming in a component or components and relevant principle(s) that reduces the likelihood of an entity achieving its objectives.” It defined‘ major deficiency’ as an “internal control deficiency or combination of deficiencies that severely reduces the likelihood that an entity can achieve its objectives.” A major deficiency is a significant issue because “When a major deficiency exists, the organization cannot conclude that it has met the requirements for an effective internal control system.” Moreover, unlike deficiencies, “a major deficiency in one component cannot be mitigated to an acceptable level by the presence and functioning of another component.” Under a compliance regime, you may be faced with known or relevant criteria to classify any deficiency. For example, if written policies do not have, at a minimum, the categories of policies laid out in the FCPA 2012 Guidance, which states “the nature and extent of transactions with foreign governments, including payments to foreign officials; use of third parties; gifts, travel, and entertainment expenses; charitable and political donations; and facilitating and expediting payments,” also formulated in the Illustrative Guide, such a finding would preclude management from “concluding that the entity has met the requirements for effective internal controls by the Framework.”  However, what steps should you take if there are no objective criteria, as laid out in the FCPA 2012 Guidance, evaluate your company’s compliance with internal controls? The Illustrative Guide says that a business’ senior management, with appropriate board oversight, “may establish objective criteria for evaluating internal control deficiencies and for how deficiencies should be reported to those responsible for achieving those objectives.” Together with appropriate auditing boundaries set by either established law, regulation, or standard, or through management exercising its judgment, you can then make a full determination of “whether each of the components and relevant principles is present and functioning and components are operating together, and ultimately in concluding on the effectiveness of the entity’s system of internal control.” The Illustrative Guide has a useful set of templates that can serve as the basis for your reporting results. They are specifically designed to “support an assessment of the effectiveness of a system of internal control and help document such an assessment.” The Document, Document, and Document feature are critical in any best practices anti-corruption or anti-bribery compliance program, whether based upon the FCPA, UK Bribery Act, or some other regulation. With the Illustrative Guide, COSO has given the compliance practitioner a handy road map to begin an analysis of your company’s internal compliance controls. When the SEC comes knocking, they will look for this type of evidence to evaluate if your company has met its obligations under the FCPA’s internal controls provisions. First are some general definitions that you need to consider in your evaluation. An internal compliance control must be both present and functioning. A control is present if the “components and relevant principles exist in the design and implementation of the system of [compliance] internal control to achieve the specified objective.”  An internal compliance control functions if the “components and relevant principles continue to exist in the conduct of the system of [compliance] internal controls to achieve specified objectives.”

Three Key Takeaways:

  1. An effective internal controls system provides reasonable assurance of the entity’s objectives relating to operations, reporting, and compliance.
  2. There are two over-arching requirements for effective internal controls. First, each of the five components is present and functional. Second are the five components operating together in an integrated approach.
  3. You can use the Tem Hallmarks of an Effective Compliance Program for an anti-corruption compliance program as your guide to testing against.

For more information on improving your internal controls management process, visit this month’s sponsor Workiva at workiva.com. The COSO model can be used to structure your assessment of internal controls.

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Everything Compliance

Everything Compliance-Episode 14

Show Notes for Everything Compliance-Episode 14 

Topics from Matt:

  1. Trump Administration & FCPA enforcement— we have two declinations now; maybe a compare-and-contrast and speculation on what a tough Trump Admin enforcement WOULD look like;
  2. EU’s GDPR— Do EU regulators know what they want to do with the enforcement of this law; if they follow the lead of the anti-competition people whacking Google, it could be a big deal;
  3. Hui Chen’s departure from the Justice Department, both her public rebuke of Trump and the substance of how she believes her guidance has been misinterpreted; and
  4. Ethical leadership and the lack thereof; the menace of abusing perks and privilege, connecting my posts about Uber’s leaders and Chris Christie vacationing on a closed beach.

Topics from Jay:

  1. How do the Campaign Finance Laws mirror/or differ from the FCPA?
  2. Will the Russian Collusion Investigation reveal the ultimate FCPA violation?
  3. Regarding Walter Shaub’s departure from the Office of Governmental Ethics (OGE), does it matter? What is OGE supposed to do, and why did it work for the past 40+ years but fall on deaf ears with the Trump administration?
  4. Dovetailing with Matt’s question about a slow H1 for FCPA enforcement and in light of the just-released Gibson Dunn FCPA Mid-Year Report, does the current climate (and lack of vigorous enforcement) provide a perfect storm for companies to look the other way if they fall off the E&C wagon, or do we think that companies are still being vigilant despite a perception of decreased enforcement?

Rants follow this week’s episode. What do the two declinations in 2017 mean? The Everything Compliance panel of experts weighs in.