Accountancy

by Sarah Perrin

Published 5 August 1999
Traditionally seen as one of the least exciting but safest career areas accountants now find that the world is their oyster -- their skills being required in all businesses from the City to charities, schools to hospitals. The slow-moving, pen and ink ledgers have gone, and the only connection with the past is that accountancy for those who are successful remains a very well paid profession. It has also become a lot more fun, as accountants find their skills required across a wider range of organisations than ever before. This allows more opportunity to specialise -- for instance it would be possible to concentrate solely on the requirements of the health service, whether for a GP fundholding practice of an opted out hospital or a regional authority. Accountancy disciplines are required there as much as in the most competitive of corporate tigers. That leaves an enviable range of options from working for a professional partnership to climbing the corporate ladder, to working in the public sector to self-employment. This book will explain all of them.