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International Professional Labour Markets and the Narratives of Accountants
Institution:1. Michigan State University, 632 Bogue Street, Room N270, East Lansing, MI 48824, United States;2. College of William and Mary, Miller Hall 3038, P.O. Box 8795, Williamsburg, VA 23187, United States;1. Lehigh University, Rauch Business Center, 621 Taylor Street, Bethlehem, PA 18015, United States;2. University of Kansas, 1654 Naismith Dr., Lawrence, KS 66045, United States;3. North Carolina State University, Nelson Hall, Raleigh, NC 27695, United States;1. Department of Economics and Management Studies (DIEC), University of Genoa, Genoa, Italy;2. School of Accounting - RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia;3. Adam Smith Business School - University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom
Abstract:This paper analyses the emergence of an international labour market in accountancy and the role it plays in the careers of Big Six Irish accountants. It suggests that within Irish accountancy an international hierarchy has arisen which places sites such as London above areas like Bermuda. The justifications for this hierarchy are often technical, i.e. one learns new accounting techniques in London but not in Bermuda. However, although technical justifications play a role in this hierarchy, the paper argues that its emergence has more to do with narrative than with technical factors. That is, it is argued that Irish accountants perceive core sites as being more “progressive” than peripheral areas and in order to display their ambition and adherence to “progressive” accounting values they migrate to the core and not the periphery. This narrative coincides with a wider narrative in Ireland, which claims professional migration is a good thing because it means Irish professionals learn new skills in the core and bring these back thus enabling the state, and the firms they work for, become competitive in an increasingly global economy. This narrative rejects the concept that professional migration is a reflection of Ireland's economic dependence in favour of viewing it as a sign of progress.
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