Which would be offset by the high income?sikeveo said:err yes and living costs are ridiculously high.
Which would be offset by the high income?sikeveo said:err yes and living costs are ridiculously high.
What an intangible and untaxable asset =]stazi said:Laz's loving
Yeh my sister got quite a pay rise when she moved abroad for Secondment. But even though she pays local taxes, the cost of living in UK is much higher. A lot of the things we pay for in dollars, is the same as what they pay but with a pounds sign in front!what971 said:I'm thinking working in the UK would be better, they have less taxes and pay you in pounds!
You'd think as accountants.. there'd be a way to get around it now wouldn't you?Capitalist said:Yes, you have to pay income taxes as lawyers (obviously).
What I was noting was the fact that those salaries aren't as glamourous when you factor in Australia's huge income taxes.
But they're still very good nonetheless.
you cant possibly understand what youre talking about unless youre in the industry yourselfmashi said:Seremify mate from alot of your previous messages you seem like you have alot of talent.
I am dumbfounded tho by your decision to go into accounting, but even more so to take on a cadetship with a big 4 firm.
The idea that people on cadetships have told me is that tis a scam on high school graduates to harvest a source of cheap labour. Add on the fact that you are doing part time uni and have nowhere else to run for the 4 or 5 years you take to complete your common commerce degree and what that means is that you are comiitted and stuck with the firm (no other firm wil really hire a no degree 'accountant' with a little bit of work experience)
uit's probably too late now, but I hope at least you see some value from my rant and investigate further with real graduates and guys that have worked withing accounting and thought otherwise. I genuinely hope it helps.
My 2 cents.
I presumed it meant a university graduate who was undertaking or has completed the CA/CPA program because usually people who work in accounting firms (ie. the actual revenue-generating staff) have post-graduate qualifications. I've also heard that in some firms, if the graduates continuously fail the post-graduate exams, then they can be asked to leave the firm.redruM said:when it says "associate", is it talking after you are a qualified CA/CPA or graduate with 1+ yrs experience?
you cant have started CA or CPA without any experience in a certified firmseremify007 said:I presumed it meant a university graduate who was undertaking or has completed the CA/CPA program because usually people who work in accounting firms (ie. the actual revenue-generating staff) have post-graduate qualifications. I've also heard that in some firms, if the graduates continuously fail the post-graduate exams, then they can be asked to leave the firm.
Sorry for missing your question earlier- I didn't notice it.
Really?Emily. said:yeah and theyre all technical modules for CA now, Foundations no longer exists
and why do you need four for CPA? surely you can study and be mentored concurrently?
I thought CA was only 9 months now.Emily. said:you cant have started CA or CPA without any experience in a certified firm
i know at least for CA you need 11 months experience to start, and im sure CPA is similar in that respect.
accountants dont generally pursue post graduate qualifications until they are in a position, not only because of the experience factor, but also because the employer pays for the tutition fees, which are pretty expensive compared with uni from what i hear.