turtleface
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Theres something strange I've noticed
In Australia, England, Canada, all the commonwealth countries, the Chief Financial Officer(CFO) or equivalently, the Finance Director (FD), is almost always (maybe 95% of the time) a Chartered Accountant (or CPA,CGA,CIMA,CMA etc. i.e. a Postgrad qualified Accountant)
In the United States, although the smaller companies (Top 500 onwards) typically all have a CPA as their CFO, a LOT (i.e. at least 50%) of Top 200 companies have a CFO who is either not a CPA nor from an Accounting background.
My thoughts on the reason why are below:
In the U.S., many incoming CFOs do not hail from the ranks of Financial Controllers (the Chief Accounting Officer under the CFO, who are 100% all Accountants regardless of country) like they do in Australia and England etc. Some U.S. CFOs hail from the ranks of Treasurers, who are typically a mix of Accountants, Lawyers, but mostly Investment Bankers and Economists.
And also, because the CPA designation in America is suited for Auditing and Public Accounting, most Management/Corporate Accountants would not have a CPA, so many CFOs would be from an Accounting background, just not a CPA.
However, I think at least 50% of CFOs of Top 500 companies are still not from Accounting backgrounds. Many are not even from business backgrounds, with some like Googles CFO (I think) who is from a Science background.
Of course, this poses no issue in big companies because they usually have a CPA as the Financial Controller anyway, and s/he becomes the de facto Chief Accounting Officer because the CFO has less Accounting knowledge.
By the way, I say "less" Accounting knowledge because almost all CFOs have either a CPA or a MBA. In the bigger companies, more have MBAs than CPAs.
I'm not sure if my guesses seem reasonable. Does anyone know why Big Company Finance Directors and CFOs are always Accountants in Australia, England etc., but not in the U.S.?
In Australia, England, Canada, all the commonwealth countries, the Chief Financial Officer(CFO) or equivalently, the Finance Director (FD), is almost always (maybe 95% of the time) a Chartered Accountant (or CPA,CGA,CIMA,CMA etc. i.e. a Postgrad qualified Accountant)
In the United States, although the smaller companies (Top 500 onwards) typically all have a CPA as their CFO, a LOT (i.e. at least 50%) of Top 200 companies have a CFO who is either not a CPA nor from an Accounting background.
My thoughts on the reason why are below:
In the U.S., many incoming CFOs do not hail from the ranks of Financial Controllers (the Chief Accounting Officer under the CFO, who are 100% all Accountants regardless of country) like they do in Australia and England etc. Some U.S. CFOs hail from the ranks of Treasurers, who are typically a mix of Accountants, Lawyers, but mostly Investment Bankers and Economists.
And also, because the CPA designation in America is suited for Auditing and Public Accounting, most Management/Corporate Accountants would not have a CPA, so many CFOs would be from an Accounting background, just not a CPA.
However, I think at least 50% of CFOs of Top 500 companies are still not from Accounting backgrounds. Many are not even from business backgrounds, with some like Googles CFO (I think) who is from a Science background.
Of course, this poses no issue in big companies because they usually have a CPA as the Financial Controller anyway, and s/he becomes the de facto Chief Accounting Officer because the CFO has less Accounting knowledge.
By the way, I say "less" Accounting knowledge because almost all CFOs have either a CPA or a MBA. In the bigger companies, more have MBAs than CPAs.
I'm not sure if my guesses seem reasonable. Does anyone know why Big Company Finance Directors and CFOs are always Accountants in Australia, England etc., but not in the U.S.?