New Straits Times

More accountant­s needed to boost financial literacy

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KUALA LUMPUR: The public and private sectors are working together to produce more accountant­s as it will build higher levels of financial literacy among the people, said Second Finance Minister Datuk Seri Johari Abdul Ghani.

“We aim to produce 60,000 accountant­s by 2020 and right now, Malaysia has 33,000 profession­al accountant­s. Of them 20,032 are chartered accountant­s,” he said after officiatin­g the Yayasan Peneraju Accounting Symposium 2017 yesterday.

He said even though Malaysia was progressin­g well in creating profession­al accountant­s, more time was needed to meet the target.

Malaysian profession­al accountant­s stand at 33,000, slightly higher than 2015’s figure of 30,000.

Yayasan Peneraju has been tasked with producing 1,000 Bumiputera profession­al accountant­s yearly since 2015, in tandem with the government’s aim to achieve a ratio of one accountant servicing 500 people by 2020.

“We are committed to improve the number of accountant­s and chartered accountant­s. We also need to focus on the quality of the talents that we produce,” he said.

According to Asia’s population/accountant ratio, Malaysia stands at one accountant servicing 950 people, lagging behind Singapore at 184 and Hong Kong at 195.

Yayasan Peneraju Chief Executive Raja Azura Raja Mahayuddin said the percentage of Bumiputera accountant­s stood at 8.42 per cent of the total 20,032 chartered accountant­s.

“As at today, we have funded more than 3,000 future Bumiputera profession­al accountant­s and will continue to produce up to 15,000 profession­al accountant­s by 2030,” she said. Bernama

 ??  ?? Datuk Seri Johari Abdul Ghani
Datuk Seri Johari Abdul Ghani

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