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Academic Advisement Center 205 Hoag Student Center / 706-864-1460 email: advisementcenter@ngcsu.edu |
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Accounting
Significant Points
Nature of The Work Accountants and auditors help to ensure that the Nations firms are run efficiently, its public records kept accurately, and its taxes paid properly and on time. They perform these vital functions by offering an increasingly wide array of business and accounting services, including public, management, and government accounting, as well as internal auditing, to their clients. Beyond carrying out the fundamental tasks of the occupationpreparing, analyzing, and verifying financial documents in order to provide information to clientsmany accountants now are required to possess a wide range of knowledge and skills. Accountants and auditors are broadening the services they offer to include budget analysis, financial and investment planning, information technology consulting, and limited legal services. Specific job duties vary widely among the four major fields of accounting: public, management, and government accounting and internal
Median annual wage and salary earnings of accountants and
auditors were $50,770 in May 2004. The middle half of the occupation earned
between $39,890 and $66,900. The top 10 percent of accountants and auditors
earned more than $88,610, and the bottom 10 percent earned less than $32,320.
In May 2004, median annual earnings in the industries employing the largest
numbers of accountants and auditors were as follows: According to a salary survey conducted by the National Association of Colleges and Employers, bachelors degree candidates in accounting received starting offers averaging $43,269 a year in 2005; masters degree candidates in accounting were offered $46,251 initially. According to a 2005 salary survey conducted by Robert Half International, a staffing services firm specializing in accounting and finance, accountants and auditors with up to 1 year of experience earned between $28,250 and $45,000 a year. Those with 1 to 3 years of experience earned between $33,000 and $52,000. Senior accountants and auditors earned between $40,750 and $69,750, managers between $48,000 and $90,000, and directors of accounting and auditing between $64,750 and $200,750. The variation in salaries reflects differences in size of firm, location, level of education, and professional credentials. In the Federal Government, the starting annual salary for junior accountants and auditors was $24,677 in 2005. Candidates who had a superior academic record might start at $30,567, while applicants with a masters degree or 2 years of professional experience usually began at $37,390. Beginning salaries were slightly higher in selected areas where the prevailing local pay level was higher. Accountants employed by the Federal Government in nonsupervisory, supervisory, and managerial positions averaged $74,907 a year in 2005; auditors averaged $78,890. More information available in the Academic Advisement Center or visit U.S. Department of Labor / Bureau of Labor Statistics at www.bls.gov/oco/ocos001.htm |
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This page last modified on September 25, 2007 by Jan Burt