Pay continues to rise in finance and accounting

Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 2016. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.

Employers in the US are likely to increase base pay for finance and accounting professionals by an average of 3% in 2016, according to a newly released salary guide.

This would make raises similar to the ones finance and accounting employees received in 2015, reports the 2016 finance and accounting salary guide published by Randstad, a staffing services organisation.

The job market is more favourable for finance and accounting job-seekers in 2016 than at any other time in the past four years, according to Logan Dubois, Randstad’s vice president for the Southeast region. He said unemployment is extremely low for degreed finance and accounting professionals, whom he expects to remain in high demand for the rest of the year and into 2017.

Professionals with certain skillsets, such as senior accountants, cost accountants, and finance managers in financial planning and analysis, can expect raises of 4% or 5%, Dubois said.

“We expect that to keep increasing as the job market becomes more competitive and becomes an even more candidate-driven market,” Dubois said.

Employers say they face challenges finding and securing top talent in this environment, Dubois said. To attract and retain skilled finance and accounting professionals, Dubois said employers should:

  • Offer skills-building opportunities. Managers should give staff members a chance to work with cross-functional teams to gain new skills.
  • Give workers responsibilities. A workplace culture that lets employees take the initiative rather than simply following orders is attractive to all workers, and especially younger employees.
  • Provide career advancement opportunities. Openly communicating chances to advance within the organisation shows employees that they have a clear path to success that they can follow without bolting for a different employer.
  • Pay competitive salaries. Fair compensation based on the size of the organisation and the skills required should be top of mind.

Job-seekers, meanwhile, can improve their chances by developing the appropriate skills. Accountants need to be able to analyse trends and develop insights that inform smarter business decisions and solve problems. The ability to communicate these insights and use technological tools also is important, Dubois said.

Experience implementing enterprise resource planning systems and analysing databases is particularly valuable.

“Accountants who can think like consultants will have a leg up on those that have more foundational or transactional skills,” he said.

Ken Tysiac (ktysiac@aicpa.org) is a CGMA Magazine editorial director.

Up Next

AI readiness, skills gaps top concerns of finance leaders

By Steph Brown
December 17, 2025
Eighty-eight per cent of finance professionals believe AI will be the most transformative tech trend over the next 12 to 24 months. Yet only 8% feel their organisations are “very well prepared” to manage it, a new AICPA and CIMA survey shows.
Advertisement

LATEST STORIES

Finance and cyber resilience

5 elements of an effective AI prompt

AI readiness, skills gaps top concerns of finance leaders

Expert advice for navigating challenges, changes, self-doubt

Legislation set to lower EU sustainability reporting threshold

Advertisement
Read the latest FM digital edition, exclusively for CIMA members and AICPA members who hold the CGMA designation.
Advertisement

Related Articles

Expert advice for navigating challenges, changes, self-doubt