Certified public accountants with the personal financial specialist credential are hailing the "significant milestone" and "monumental addition" of a planning section to the CPA exam.
For the first time
The change
"This journey has not only been a testament to perseverance but also a reminder of the impact dedicated professionals can have on shaping the future of their profession," Jean-Luc Bourdon, the founder of Santa Barbara, California-based
The test material spans 25 different tasks and skills including some applicable to planning, according to a "blueprint" guide on
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Bourdon's post, "The Decade-Long Journey to Integrate Personal Financial Planning into the CPA Exam," credited Andrea Millar of
Millar led
"Adding personal financial planning (PFP) services to CPAs' offerings opens the door to multiple opportunities for CPAs, their employees, their recruiting efforts and their clients," Susan Tillery, CEO of Kennesaw, Georgia-based Paraklete Financial and past chair of the AICPA Personal Financial Planning Executive Committee and the AICPA Personal Financial Specialist Credential Committee, wrote in
"The need for PFP services is great; the need for PFP services offered by CPAs is even greater," Tillery wrote. "The multiplication that occurs in client revenues, client retention, employee satisfaction, employee recruitment and the overall benefit to the client compels CPAs to take a closer look at why PFP services are not already being offered by their firms."
While CPAs have advised clients about personal finance for more than a century and the
"Adding PFP to the CPA Exam increases awareness of the role of CPAs in PFP planning, which is an exciting development for the accounting curriculum and the PFP field," Snyder wrote. "This inclusion will inspire the next generation of accounting professionals by motivating aspiring candidates to pursue this dynamic and rewarding field."
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Other wealth and tax professionals chimed in with their support for adding the questions about planning to the exam. They could nudge "young students to see personal financial planning as a career" and help address the fact that "some people are cautious when searching for financial planning advice, as they feel most of the advisors today are salespeople," Jeffrey Levine, the director of financial strategies for Woburn, Massachusetts-based
"While there will always be a need for accurate and timely fair presentation of business records, well-prepared tax filings and a profession with strong ethics and strong training to guide business and personal financial matters, expanding the role of CPAs into personal financial planning is long overdue," Levine said. "Some predict that AI will take over our profession and reduce our value. I believe financial planning done properly requires a professional to gather information, listen and provide insight. Preparing more CPAs for this area by providing coursework and adding the subject to the exam is a major step toward building a workforce to handle the needs that are already here."
The new CPA Exam material on planning could "help stop and maybe even reverse the terrible
"You can't really do a complete job of financial planning without tax being a huge part of it," Watts said. "Our perspective is that everyone's financial planning should be rooted in an assessment and understanding of the impact of taxes every step of the way. In fact, I firmly believe that someday, financial planning without incorporating tax planning will be considered unthinkable."