Sorry I'm a bit annoyed now because I spent quite a bit of time replying and my internet explorer lost my post! Grr!
coming back to this post again
so is there anyway that u can use the actuarial knowledge for accounting job?
An example would be if you worked in Audit: Financial Services, you could choose to specialise in Insurance companies/funds which are heavily reliant on actuarial models for their business. Being knowledgable in both accounting and actuarial studies will give you the advantage of being able to understand actuarial reports (as well as know what to ask the client) and also better understand the linkage between an actuarial report and the financial statement items such as provisioning and risk models. This would be different to a normal accountant graduate who would just see a report, look for numbers which look familiar, and require the client (or seniors) to assist greatly in interpretting it. Studying actuarial will make life a bit easier for you since understanding the reports and client responses to audit queries will come a lot more naturally/smoother.
Another area where actuarial reports is sometimes used are private equity firms- maybe not in the current climate, but in the past there was a lot of valuation models which relied on actuarial assumptions which required us to read through and understand. If you have an actuarial background, even without practicing it, at least you can understand the reports and how they work alot easier than we can!
Pretty much every field can be combined with accounting in some form to create an advantage- the usual example is engineering/mining because most accountants like myself have no idea how it works or where the inherent risks really are.