In Brief The supply of new accounting students and CPAs—the pipeline to the profession—has been a topic of growing concern ...
It's been a year since the AICPA and NASBA's CPA Evolution Initiative launched, and the AICPA and NASBA offer some excellent ...
The passage of the landmark Bipartisan Infrastructure Law by Congress underscores the urgent need for CPAs to engage actively ...
Many recent articles, in this publication and others, have narrowly cited the 150-hour requirement for CPA licensure as a significant barrier to attracting skilled talent to the accounting profession.
The United States has long been an attractive destination for students from other countries who want to pursue higher education, with over 850,000 international students enrolled during the academic ...
Definitions of accounting deployed today are observably narrow, outdated, and increasingly unsuitable for realizing the full potential of accounting in today’s world. Without key definitional change ...
In response to widespread concern that some students avoid becoming CPAs due to the time and cost associated with post-bachelor’s degree licensure requirements (leading to what has been called the ...
Currently, in order to be licensed, CPA candidates must earn a bachelor’s degree (usually 120 hours), earn 30 hours beyond the bachelor’s degree (which may entail completing a master’s degree), and ...
While many in the profession have expressed concern about the current 150-hour model’s effect on the shrinking pipeline to the profession, less attention has been paid to the challenges some students ...
What if students who are required to take a core accounting course could study more alluring topics in that core course, such as sustainability and forensic accounting, and learn how to read financial ...