Financial literacy in America--the profession stakes a claim.
Position | CPA Ambassador Program - American Institute of Certified Public Accountants Foundation |
Last month's CPA Letter unveiled the profession's new CPA Ambassador Program in which CPAs are being trained to go into their communities and reach out to the media to discuss four critical initiatives of the profession. One of those initiatives is the profession's involvement in financial literacy (the others are recruitment, small business success and restoring confidence).
CPAs are not new to promoting financial literacy. The AICPA and the AICPA Foundation have long been committed to educating Americans about the importance of managing their finances. In the past year alone, the Institute reached out to many audiences--from students to women investors--and provided them with information to make sound tax and financial planning decisions. Following are some examples of our efforts.
Teaching Students and Educators
One way to educate young Americans is to teach them about the CPA profession. Several years ago the AICPA introduced the CPA Information Package, a collection of resources for educators to use to help students understand various aspects of finance.
The AICPA also reached students by educating their teachers about personal finances. Last year the AICPA Foundation provided funding for "Financial Smarts for Teachers," a program the Jump$tart organization in Calif. created to help instructors understand their own finances.
Two new television programs funded by the AICPA Foundation focus on teaching middle and high school students about personal finance and the accounting profession. Having aired the shows on PBS YOU last summer, the Foundation is considering other distribution channels.
Wise Investing
More Americans than ever participate in the capital markets through 401(k) plans and other investment vehicles. To help them understand investing, the AICPA provided technical review for a handbook for CPAs and other financial managers, Prudent Investment Practices, developed by the Foundation for Fiduciary Studies (www.ffstudies.org).
Managing Money
In 2002 and 2003 the AICPA and Money magazine sponsored Women's Financial Health Week, reaching...
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