Journal of Accountancy Podcast

AICPA & CIMA
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Mar 26, 2026 • 13min

The surprising way one CFO grows her network and her knowledge

Wassia Kamon, CPA, returned as a guest on the Journal of Accountancy podcast to preview her sessions at the CFO Conference and ENGAGE. Kamon also discussed the growing expectations placed on today's CFOs and how those expectations helped shape one of her conference sessions. Kamon also reflected on how launching her podcast, The Diary of a CFO, has expanded her network and grown her knowledge. What you'll learn from this episode: Kamon's summary of her session with Paul Young at the CFO Conference in April. Why she says her podcast "is almost like a business card." The importance of a true reset and how a reset is different from rest. What she's most looking forward to at ENGAGE in June. Why sessions related to artificial intelligence will be particularly relevant this year.
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Mar 19, 2026 • 17min

Ancient Greece to AI: The past and future of bank fraud

David Stone, CPA, CFE, MBA, is the author of the most recent FVS Eye on Fraud report. In this episode, Stone, senior manager–Financial Services Practice Group at BerryDunn, shares insights from the report, which focuses on internal and external fraud risks facing financial institutions. Stone explains how long‑standing schemes — from misuse of dormant accounts to persistent check‑fraud activity — continue to evolve even as institutions strengthen their controls. Stone, a graduate of the AICPA Leadership Academy, also describes emerging, technology‑driven threats such as deepfakes, more sophisticated ransomware, and the potential impact of quantum computing on systems once considered secure. Previous Eye on Fraud-focused episodes: February 2026 July 2025 March 2025 What you'll learn from this episode: David Stone's explanation of perhaps the first recorded case of bank fraud. Defining internal and external fraud, both of which are focus areas in the March Eye on Fraud report. Why dormant accounts offer opportunities for fraudsters. The fraud stat that "astounded" Stone. How deepfakes and enhanced ransomware tactics are reshaping the threat landscape for financial institutions. What quantum computing could mean for the future of fraud prevention.
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Mar 12, 2026 • 18min

Tax advocacy: AICPA experts on new bills shaping tax preparer rules

Two AICPA tax experts from the Washington, D.C., office joined the JofA podcast to discuss a recent Government Accountability Office report on paid tax return preparers and why its findings matter during a busy filing season. Melanie Lauridsen, vice president–Tax Policy & Advocacy, and Todd Sloves, director–Congressional & Political Affairs, break down bipartisan legislation in Congress — including the TAS Act — and explain how its provisions could strengthen oversight and modernize IRS processes. The conversation also highlights the SAFE Act and its aim to simplify the task of filing extensions for taxpayers and practitioners. The Q&A also outlines where broad consensus exists in the tax community and why this moment could be pivotal for long‑awaited tax administration reforms. What you'll learn from this episode: What the statistics in a GAO report on paid tax return preparers show. How minimum professional standards could strengthen IRS oversight, and why the AICPA supports establishing competency and regulatory guardrails for all preparers. Provisions in the TAS Act recently introduced in the Senate, including reforms shaped by bipartisan work and those aimed at improving taxpayer service. Lauridsen's explanation of how the SAFE Act would simplify filing extensions, reducing the need for complex estimates. A reminder of the particulars of the "mailbox rule." The factors Sloves cites in his belief that the discussed legislation has a path to passage.
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Mar 5, 2026 • 8min

Summing up economic sentiment and concerns about inflation, recession

Optimism among U.S. CPA decision-makers in February improved when compared with the outlook in November, but overall sentiment remains guarded. That's one conversation topic in the latest Journal of Accountancy podcast episode. In the episode, Ken Witt, CPA, CGMA, associate director–Management Accounting Research & Development for the AICPA and CIMA, break down the sentiment about the domestic economy, the global economy, and respondents' companies. The discussion also touches on top challenges, hiring plans, and recession expectations. What you'll learn from this episode: The increase in own‑company optimism from the previous quarter. The reasons that both optimists and pessimists cite for their views. The "dance" that inflation and domestic economic conditions have done on the survey's list of top challenges. Projected revenue and profit growth in the coming 12 months.
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Feb 26, 2026 • 18min

Talent shuffle: Why people want to change jobs and how leaders can adapt

At several points over the past six years, employee retention has ebbed and flowed. In part, workforce trends have been tied to the COVID-19 pandemic hastening the predominance of remote and hybrid work. And, more recently, economic uncertainty has contributed to employee sentiment. On this episode of the Journal of Accountancy podcast, two Robert Half executives discuss general hiring trends and the outlook for accounting and finance roles. Additionally, they examine the dynamics of promoting from within versus hiring externally. And, in case you missed it, news dropped on publication day that even a Hollywood director might have found interesting: ENGAGE keynote speakers were announced. What you'll learn from this episode: Why nearly 40% of employees say they plan to look for a new job in 2026 and how that compares with recent trends such as "the big stay." Some of the factors employees are considering in their decision to find work elsewhere. Steve Saah's reminder that the demand for accounting and finance professionals remains strong even as hiring managers say it's becoming more challenging to find skilled candidates. Kathy Burton's explanation for why companies should move away from thinking about "diminishing" skillsets. The importance of upskilling and reskilling and why "courageous curiosity" is a valued trait.
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Feb 19, 2026 • 13min

Inside the AICPA's effort to enhance the skills of early-career CPAs

Carl Mays, AICPA vice president who leads efforts on early-career CPA skills and workforce readiness. He discusses the new Profession Ready Initiative and how Rise2040 research shaped it. Topics include automation, AI, and offshoring reshaping entry-level work. He outlines a multi-pronged approach with learning solutions, academic and state engagement, and ways to get involved.
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Feb 11, 2026 • 14min

Lessons in internal control lapses from major fraud cases

Tammy Thomas, forensic accounting director at CBiz and co-author of the FVS Eye on Fraud report, specializes in forensic consulting and embezzlement investigations. She examines how weak segregation of duties and small control gaps let fraud persist. She describes cases where role consolidation and deadline pressure eroded controls. Practical prevention steps and why internal control is a living process are highlighted.
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Feb 5, 2026 • 13min

Differentiating agentic and generative AI — and more with a Tech Q&A author

Wesley Hartman, automation developer and founder of Automata Practice Development, co-author of the Technology Q&A column, talks AI for accounting. He contrasts generative AI that creates text with agentic AI that performs multi-step tasks. He flags hallucinations and deepfake scams as major risks. He offers practical, methodical advice for adopting AI tools without falling for hype.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 10min

Why stablecoin controls create a solid foundation in an evolving environment

A new episode of the JofA podcast breaks down the AICPA's updated criteria for stablecoin controls, explaining what issuers and practitioners need to know as regulatory expectations evolve. This episode explores how revised AICPA stablecoin criteria support more consistent reporting, disclosure, and control assessments across a rapidly developing digital asset landscape. What you'll learn from this episode: Why the AICPA developed updated criteria for stablecoin controls and how they complement existing presentation and disclosure criteria. How the criteria help issuers and auditors evaluate controls over tokens in circulation and the related reserve assets. How the guidance aligns with regulation, including federal guidelines in the GENIUS Act. Who can use the criteria and how practitioners can apply them in assurance engagements involving stablecoins. What work the AICPA Attestation Subgroup is planning for digital asset-related controls and auditing guidance.
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Jan 22, 2026 • 17min

Accountability the 'No. 1 thing' and other reflections from Bill Reeb

In this episode, former AICPA Chair Bill Reeb, CPA/CITP, CGMA, reflects on more than 40 years in the profession and why he believes accountability is the starting point for a successful leadership effort. Reeb, speaking from the Digital CPA Conference in December, discusses how momentum, clarity of direction, and facing fear help leaders navigate today's rapid pace of change. He also addresses technological shifts including the rise of artificial intelligence and explains why a book he wrote about succession planning was not predominantly about succession. What you'll learn from this episode: Reeb's view of CPAs' unlimited career possibilities. What he and his wife learned on a shopping trip about 40 years ago. Why momentum, facing fear, and embracing change are essential elements of strong leadership. How accountability supports effective change management and keeps teams aligned on strategy. How rapid technological shifts have created higher standards but not necessarily time savings. Why the answer to "What is Bill Reeb's succession plan?" is complicated.

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