During June this year, accountants along with other occupations were added to the Priority Migration Skilled Occupation List (PMSOL). This inclusion indicates there is insufficient accountants in the Australian market, and the forecast new accountants will be insufficient in the near term i.e. new accountants from universities or other related industries such as bookkeeping. The Australian accounting labour shortage has …
How Odyssey Assists Smaller Accounting Firms Take on More Complex Clients
We recently received an email from a client, and wanted to reproduce a few interesting observations by the client, a small accounting firm with a sole practitioner partner. There’s not much to add as this client has summed up the wealth of experience with Odyssey’s compliance divisions, as well as the investment in systems to provide a seamless experience for …
Australia “Great Resignation” Impacting Australian Accounting Firms
More recently we’ve been approached by a few accounting firms who have commented they’ve lost staff recently, and are unable to find suitable staff replacements. Some of these firms believe this is only temporary, which has shown Odyssey’s ad-hoc business model an appropriate model for these firms to deploy in the short term. While there is some online discussion as …
Australian Accountants Downsizing Space in Their Offices
Walking along the street the other day I overheard a discussion, which revolved around a head office surrendering their space downtown, and the staff being offered flexible shared workspaces by a third party provider. As the discussion progressed, the head office employee mentioned there was still a shift change needed by the owners of commercial space, who were still pursuing …
After COVID, Australia Will be Short of Accountants for…
The AFR recently noted that NSW government advice to new Premier Dominic Perrottet notes Australia needs an ‘explosive’ surge of 2 million migrants over the next 5 years, which equates to 400,000 per year. Economic recovery and post-pandemic growth can only be achieved through an immigration program similar to Australia’s post-World War II approach would ensure Australia would benefit from …
Travel Over the Next 12 Months for Australian Accountants
Travel, and overseas travel, is on many people’s list. Looking to the announcement that Australians may shortly be able to travel overseas again, we’re seeing more articles on travelling to many of our favourite destinations such as Bali. At the same time, many flights are already booked with Australians looking to head overseas for the Christmas 2021 break. Flights to …
The 8 immediate issues Australian accountants need to resolve before June 2022
Over the next 6-12 months, there will be eight major impacts on the Australian economy, all of which will affect accounting companies and their clients in Australia. These are: The Covid-19 vaccine rollouts, which include the Australian state and federal governments response to the vaccination percentages and the opening of state and federal borders Added to the above vaccine rollouts, …
Your local Accountant will soon be reopening his office
The Property Council of Australia released the results of their occupancy survey which highlighted the impact of extended lockdowns on Australia’s largest CBD’s. Sydney’s CBD occupancy was 4% of pre-covid levels, and Melbourne stood at 7%, an indication of the strict nature of the lockdown in these cities. Canberra recorded a decline from 73% to just 8% of pre-COVID levels. …
Will mandatory vaccines for Australian accountants become the norm?
In a recent AFR article, Deloitte has issued a mandate “forcing” Deloitte Australia’s employees and partners to be vaccinated in order to return to the office. It’s certainly a highly charged and contentious issue, with other overseas recent news indicating a New York healthcare provider fired 1,400 employees who refused to get vaccinated, and another article confirming teachers may be …
Australian accountants living in a digital age: 3 key cyber skills
Over the past 1-2 years with the implementation of working from home there has been a significant increase in cyber attacks on these more fragile systems. A large number of Australian firms (small and large) have been subject to cyber attacks, which are growing increasingly more clever and more complex. At the same time, many firms are paying ransoms paving …