Reading: Lesson 1 - A career as a tax specialist
While most students are aware that accountants frequently assist their clients with tax returns and other tax issues, few are aware of the large number of diverse and challenging careers available in the field of taxation. Nearly all public accounting firms, ranging from the “Big 4” international firms to the sole practitioner, generate a significant portion of their fees through tax compliance, planning and consulting. With over 155 million individual tax returns filed in the US every year, it is not surprising that many individuals and most businesses need assistance in dealing with the incredibly complex US and international tax laws. This complexity also provides tremendous tax planning opportunities. As a tax specialist, you will show individual clients how to reduce their taxes while simultaneously helping them make decisions about investing, buying a house, funding their children’s education, and planning their retirement. For your business clients, careful planning and structuring of business investments and transactions can save millions of dollars in taxes. In fact, it is safe to say that very few significant business transactions take place without the careful guidance of a tax specialist.
A career in taxation is by no means limited to public accounting. Because there are so many types of
taxes impacting so many aspects of our lives, tax specialists act as consultants in a large number of
fields. For example, many companies offer deferred compensation or stock bonus plans to their
executives. Nearly all companies provide some sort of pension or other retirement plan for their
employees, as well as health care benefits. Significant tax savings can be generated for both the
company and their employees if these benefits are structured correctly. In response to the amazing
complexity of our tax laws, many schools offer masters degrees specializing in tax. Such a degree is not
required to specialize in tax, but does offer students a significant advantage if they want to pursue a
career in taxation. In a recent survey of 1,400 chief financial officers, the top two responses to the question “which one of the following areas of specialization would you recommend to someone just
beginning his or her career in accounting?” were personal financial planning and tax accounting. These
responses reflect the indisputable fact that as the US demographic includes more wealthy, and older,
Americans than ever before, professional tax guidance will be in ever-increasing demand.
The career paths outlined above do not nearly cover all of the many professional options available to
tax specialists. For example, are you concerned that a traditional tax accounting job may be too tame
for you? Special agents of the IRS routinely participate in criminal investigations and arrests, working
closely with other federal law enforcement agencies. Are you interested in law? Accounting offers an
ideal undergraduate degree for aspiring business and tax attorneys. If you think you may be interested
in a career as a tax specialist, be sure to consult with one of your school’s tax professors about the many
job opportunities this field provides.
Chapters 1 and 2 introduced the accounting process of analyzing, classifying, and summarizing
business transactions into accounts. You learned how these transactions are entered into the journal
and posted to the ledger accounts. You also know how to use the trial balance to test the equality of
debits and credits in the journalizing and posting process. The purpose of the accounting process is to
produce accurate financial statements so they may be used for making sound business decisions. At
this point in your study of accounting, you are concentrating on three financial statements—the income
statement, the statement of retained earnings, and the balance sheet.
When you began to analyze business transactions in Chapter 1, you saw that the evidence of the transaction is usually a source document. It is any written or printed evidence that describes the essential facts of a business transaction. Examples are receipts for cash paid or received, checks written or received, bills sent to customers, or bills received from suppliers. The giving, receiving, or creating of source documents triggered the journal entries made in Chapter 2. The journal entries we discuss in this chapter are adjusting entries. The arrival of the end of the accounting period triggers adjusting entries. Accountants use adjusting entries to bring accounts to their proper balances before preparing financial statements. In this chapter, you learn the difference between the cash basis and accrual basis of accounting. Then you learn about the classes and types of adjusting entries and how to prepare them.