Construction sector is a significant component of the global economy, accounting for a significant portion of GDP and employment in many countries. It is also a complex and dynamic sector, with a wide range of risks and challenges.
The purpose of Internal auditing in the Construction sector is to provide independent and objective assurance and consulting, designed to add value and improve an organisation’s operations.
In the construction industry, internal audit plays a pivotal and indispensable role in ensuring the financial health and regulatory compliance of companies operating within this sector. This crucial function systematically examines and oversees financial processes, risk management practices, and adherence to industry-specific regulations. As a diligent overseer, internal audit assesses the transparency of financial transactions, safeguards sensitive company data, and evaluates the efficiency of operational procedures.
It is so important for internal auditors to be aware of the applicable regulations that apply to their work. This will help them to ensure that they are conducting their audits in a compliant and ethical manner. Below given are some acts that falls under these regulations:
Governance Laws
Economic Laws
Contract Laws
Labour Laws
There are other laws that apply to the industry:
Securities Exchange Board of India Act, 1992, Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999, Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, etc.
It is so necessary for the Internal Auditor to be aware of the various circulars issued by the RBI regarding foreign currency transactions.
Civil engineers are the most important persons in the construction sector industry. They also hold key positions in the organisation in the areas of planning, site execution, quality assurance, and technical audit, etc. Below given are various activities that comes under engineering domain:
The construction sector department takes over the tender file and prepares for mobilisation after awarding the contract.
This includes:
In order to facilitate quantity reconciliation, both clients and subcontractors have the same billing period and frequency. To prevent delays in certification and fund release, client RA bills prepared and submitt on time, which negatively impact project fund management. Many organisations keep the cut-off date 5-6 days prior to the month-end to enable bill placement at the month-end.
Delayed client billing result in delayed subcontractor billing and quantity comparison, resulting in excess quantity given to subcontractors, which negatively impact project profitability.
Billing engineers are responsible for submitting bills to clients on time. But The project manager or a dedicated billing engineer play this role,but depending on the project size and margins. Billing engineer located at the head office or the site.
Internal auditors review the following to ensure that billing engineers are following proper procedures:
Documentation from the site to the head office for billing: This includes drawings, joint measurement reports, and other claims not certify by the client.
Frequency of visits to construction sites:To understand the progress and identify any work that is not part of the original scope,and billing engineers visit construction sites.
Preparation of bills of sub-contractors: Billing engineers responsible for preparing bills of sub-contractors and preparing a quantity cross check report.
Contractors typically reconcile FIM usage with work done monthly, but the term ‘free’ is misleading, which is why accountability of Free Issue Material (FIM) is important. To prevent discrepancies and revenue loss while running accounting bills, reconciliation statements are required to match FIM balances. Assessing physical FIM quantities, especially steel, requires an experienced supervisor. Clients also insist on returning empty cement bags as a proof of consumption. Contractors return unusable FIM, such as unused 6mm cement. Work orders define FIM that is serviceable, such as steel pieces that are over 2 metres in length.
Thus, the internal auditor has to ensure that the reconciliation is prepared on a timely basis. Further, the project needs to have a dedicated team at the site for miscellaneous work, such as segregating scrap/ ensuring that the scaffolding and other materials are not submerged by the debris or sand during backfilling.
Accounting plays a significant role in the construction sector industry. The accounts department highlight the performance on a regular basis for the project to be monitor properly. To ensure proper monitoring of the project, it is so necessary for the accounts department to consistently highlight performance.
The internal auditors need to pay attention to four critical areas when it comes to accounting in the construction sector:
AS-7, Accounting for Construction Contracts, is an accounting standard that is applicable to the construction industry, which operates solely on a contractual basis. Revenue recognition is solely based on the Percentage Completion Method Accounting (POCM) as mandated by the standard.
To understand the accounting complexities, let’s consider the following example:
Value of work order: 100 cr. Estimated completion cost:80 cr.
Cost incurred till date: 20 cr.
Percentage completion: 25% (20/80)
Revenue to be booked: 25 cr. Profit booked: 5 cr.
In the POCM, revenue is recognize based on the percentage of work completed, as measured by the ratio of costs incurred to date to estimated completion costs. In the above example, the contractor has completed 25% of the work, so they can recognize 25 cr. in revenue, resulting in a5 cr. profit.
The two most important parameters for distinguishing construction sector companies are construction quality and safety. Work methods are the focus of quality assurance (QA), while testing is the focus of quality control (QC).
Construction companies take specific steps to ensure quality and safety:
Organisation design their documentation requirements to match their centralised or decentralised model. All documents received from the site accompanied by the correct ancillary documents and proper authentication from site personnel.
For Sales Bills, the following documents are required for data entry:
Store is a very important link in the organisational chain. Manufacturing locations typically have a relatively easy time implementing control due to the well-defined location of stores and the area where the material is issued.
Physical stock verification in construction sites is a challenging process due to the open environment, multiple locations, and items at height. To mitigate these challenges, so follow these steps:
Fuel is so essential for construction sites, but it is also so expensive and needs to be carefully controlled. To minimise fuel theft and ensure efficient usage, the following steps taken:
To ensure that material consumption is in line with project standards, but it is essential to reconcile principal items at construction sites. This is done by comparing bills to inward and issued quantities, duly authorised by the site engineer/ project manager. Principal items to be included are cement, steel, sand, aggregate, admixture, and binding wire.
Goods and services available at the right time in the right quantity at the site to ensure a smooth process of the job.
Purchase made either from site or HO. Ordering Raw Materials, Bulk Materials, and Capital goods from HO is the usual practice, and other items purchased at site if available at competitive rates. Purchasing done economically while strictly adhering to quality specifications.
It is the most essential part of the entity operating in the construction industry. It refers to the items/ services procured by the concern in order to enable it to provide its services. Cement, iron, steel, sand, bricks, and gravel are commonly procured for the construction industry.
The Internal Auditor review the following processes and make the observations, if any:
Vendor Management: To ensure cost-effectiveness, quality, and timely delivery of materials, construction companies choose their vendors carefully. This involves maintaining a vendor database and coding system, negotiating annual contracts for main raw materials, evaluating vendors periodically, and reviewing the vendor selection policy regularly.
Material/ Service Requisition Process: Ensure budget approval:
If the material requirement is not within budget limits, obtain approval from the planning department.
Verify authorization: Ensure that the material requirement is raise by an authorised person.
Receipt of Material: Ensure that received materials match purchase orders by reviewing material receipt procedures. GRNs are only issued once quality and store acceptance are verify.
Supply Chain Management: Verify the steps follow by the entity to make sure availability of material. Usually, the enterprise cover the following in its supply chain:
Cash Purchases at Sites: Ensure proper handling and accountability by reviewing company policy and controls. Define a cash ceiling for site-based purchases and monitor compliance.
Construction sector sites need equipment that purchased or rented, and the decision is based on the duration of need and the cost-benefit analysis of each option.
Hiring Subcontractors: The subcontractor selection process, which includes vendor qualification, bidding, and contract negotiation, is reviewed by internal auditors. They also assess the subcontractor’s performance and compliance with the contract.
Equipments/ Machinery/ Plant/ Tools: The contract value decreases when the client provides all equipment, but this creates dependency on the client.When deciding whether to buy or rent equipment, consider financial parameters such as debt-equity ratio and fixed asset turnover ratio, rather than making instinctive decisions based on rental costs.
Specific Issues related to equipment: The capacity of construction equipment is determined by project size, and making wrong decisions can have an impact on profitability, as demonstrated by concrete making. Mixers, mini batching plants, mobile batching plants, and large batching plants can be used. Concrete movement equipment includes transit mixers, concrete pumps, concrete buckets, cranes, and boom placers. Organisations may own or rent equipment depending on needs.
Scaffolding Material: To work on buildings, construction workers utilise scaffolding. Scaffolding can be made from various materials, but the main challenge is ensuring proper control over these materials.
To conclude, Internal audit in the Construction Sector is an essential process that ensures compliance with legal, financial, and regulatory standards.But The project lifecycle is facility by its promotion of transparency, risk mitigation, and operational efficiency. By carefully reviewing contracts, ensuring compliance with building codes, labour laws, and environmental regulations, internal auditors are crucial in maintaining project integrity, protecting stakeholders’ interests, and upholding the sector’s reputation for quality, safety, and ethical practices.