Tuesday, May 26, 2020
So you want to be an accountant...
So you want to be an accountant Welcome to the latest installment of College Transitionsââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"So you want to be aâ⬠¦.â⬠series. Designed to help career-minded high school students think intelligently about their postsecondary journeys, these blogs will look at the financial, academic, and personal factors one should consider when exploring various professions.Does going to a prestigious undergraduate school help?If your aim is to get offers from the major accounting firms such as Ernst Young, Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers, or KPMG, then the undergraduate school that you attend can boost your career prospects. Schools such as Villanova, Notre Dame, and Boston College are among the top feeders to the Big Four firms. Other less-selective schools such as Binghamton University, Bentley University, and Fairfield University have strong connections to the one or more of the big four (i.e. Binghamtonââ¬â¢s PwC Scholarââ¬â¢s Program) and can also serve as a direct pipeline to employment at the hi gh-end firms.Do I have to major in accounting?For those who enter college 100% sure that they want to be accountants, majoring in accounting is the most direct route to your desired destination. While the majority of CPAs nationwide possess a bachelorââ¬â¢s in accounting, other CPAs studied related areas such as finance, economics, business, or even completely unrelated fields. It is important to note, however, that non-accounting majors may have to take additional courses in accounting or taxation before being eligible to sit for the CPA exam.The pathway to CPAStates have varying requirements about how many hours of upper-level accounting classes one needs to sit for the CPA exam, but unless you live in the Virgin Islands, if you want to become a Certified Public Accountant, youââ¬â¢ll need to rack up 150 credit hours. Since a traditional bachelorââ¬â¢s degree program is only 120 hours, youââ¬â¢ll either have to continue your college education beyond four years or set s ail for St. Thomas in the Caribbean (hmmmm, this might actually not be the worst option).After completing your hours of study it will be time to tackle the CPA exam ââ¬â a four part test that covers auditing, regulation, financial accounting and reporting, and business environment and concepts. The test is rigorous and failure rates are high. In fact, in 2016, pass rates for three of the four sections were under 50%.Consider a dual BS/MS program Since youââ¬â¢re stuck having to log 150 credit hours to sit for the CPA, you might as well consider earning a masterââ¬â¢s degree along the way. Many universities offer 5-year BS/MS accounting programs which can be slightly more efficient than earning a bachelorââ¬â¢s and then adding the masterââ¬â¢s down the road. Yet, most masterââ¬â¢s degrees in the accounting field only run between 30-36 credits anyway, so youââ¬â¢re not exactly shaving off that many credits.Less common but far more advantageous are the dual-degree programs that can be completed in four years, giving their students a chance to emerge with a graduate degree to sit for the CPA exam a year early. LaSalle University offers an accelerated program for particularly ambitious future number-crunchers that allows students, through a boatload of summer work, to graduate with a BS in accounting and an MBA in just four years. Butler University has a four-year program that results in a B.S./Master of Accounting dual degree.Accountant salaries As long as taxes and businesses exist, accounting is sure to remain a steady and predictable field offering solid compensation. Professionals with an accounting degree but no CPA license presently average just over 50k while those with CPAs earn between 5-15% more. The top ten percent of earners with the CPA credentials earn 118k and up. As with most professions, those in major metropolitan areas, specifically San Francisco, San Jose, and New York enjoy the highest annual earnings.For those with sight s on even higher dollar figures, CPAs can ascend to corporate leadership positions such as CFO or corporate treasurerââ¬âjobs that can pay a few hundred thousand per year or more.Plan the financial endIf your goal is to become a CPA, itââ¬â¢s important to keep in mind that a 5thà year of study will be required. This translates, of course, to an extra year of tuition and an extra year of not bringing home a salary. Fortunately, job prospects for accountants are solid, expected to grow by 11% over the next decade, which means that at least youââ¬â¢re likely to have a steady income to pay down any undergraduate debt incurred.To read previous installments of the ââ¬Å"So you want to be aâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ series, click the links below:So you want to be a lawyerSo you want to be a doctorSo you want to be a teacherSo you want to be an engineerSo you want to beà a software developer/engineer/programmerSo you want to be a financial analystSo you want to be a journalistSo you want to be a psychologist
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