Accountants Have Become Hot Commodities - 11/7/2006

Home

Index of Filings

News and Press Releases

Filings

Decisions

Settlements

Litigation Activity Indices

Top Ten List

Annual/Quarterly Updates

Clearinghouse Research

Articles & Papers

Search

Related Sites

About Us

Local Rules

Sponsors


Register


_______________
Copyright © 2001
Stanford Law School


2006 News and Press Releases

News News 2006


HEADLINE NEWS:

Accountants Have Become Hot Commodities
Staff Writer – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Securities Mosaic. November 7, 2006

_________________________________________________________________________

EXCERPT: Any beginning college business student can tell you that when demand outpaces supply, price goes up. Which might explain why so many of them are flocking to the field of accounting, where the "Sarbanes-Oxley effect" has pushed up demand for workers -- as well as salaries. "Currently in accounting, there are more opportunities than candidates," said Chuck Conner, manager of recruiting for the Pittsburgh accounting firm Schneider Downs. "We call it the talent war. In the same way people fought over land, we might have five or six firms making offers to the same candidates." The Sarbanes-Oxley Act, passed by Congress in 2002, tightened internal controls and mandated auditor independence in the wake of corporate scandals such as Enron and WorldCom. To comply with it, corporations and accounting firms have ramped up hiring, piquing interest among college students. In other words, undergraduates are majoring in accounting for the same reason that Willie Sutton robbed banks: that's where the money is. A study by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants in the spring of 2000 showed that 2 percent of college students were majoring in accounting. The same survey done in the spring of 2006 showed that figure had ballooned to 10 percent. Since the passage of Sarbanes-Oxley, commonly known as SOX, Schneider Downs has hired about 35 percent more accountants, said Mr. Conner. That includes a doubling of the number of students hired straight out of college each year, from roughly eight to 15. At accounting giant KPMG's Pittsburgh office, the firm now employs 200 accountants -- about 50 percent more than the days before SOX. The number of entry-level hires, now 26, also has increased about 50 percent. Jeffrey DeMarco, director of human resources for KPMG, said that the global firm has an adequate number of entry-level hires to meet demand. Where SOX is really taking a toll is in experienced hires, he said. In such an "extremely tight job market," there just aren't enough bodies to fill the expanded number of positions. Experts attribute part of the shortage to the fact that five to 10 years ago, accounting wasn't high on the list of careers for bright, math-oriented students. The explosion of dot.coms and their demand for computer, software and other engineers was just too great a lure.

Back to News page | Back to Archived News 2006 page | Back to Top