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'Big Four' salaries: How much accountants and consultants make at Deloitte, PwC, KPMG, and EY

three office employees walking and talking together in an office
Even an entry-level consultant at the "Big Four" can earn over $200,000.

Luis Alvarez/Getty Images

  • The "Big Four" accounting firms employ about 1.5 million people worldwide. 
  • Many of these employees make six-figure salaries and are eligible for annual bonuses.  
  • Business Insider analyzed data to determine how much employees are paid at these firms. 

The so called "Big Four" accounting firms — Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), KPMG, and Ernst & Young (EY) — are known for paying their staff high salaries. 

An entry-level consultant who just graduated from business school can make over $200,000 a year at the four firms when you include base salary, bonuses, and relocation expenses. 

Several of these firms have faced layoffs and implemented hiring freezes over the past year as demand for consulting services has waned. Still, they're a good bet for anyone looking to land a six-figure job straight out of school. 

Business Insider analyzed the US Office of Foreign Labor Certification's 2023 disclosure data for permanent and temporary foreign workers to find out what PwC, KPMG, EY, and Deloitte paid US-based employees for jobs ranging from entry-level to executive roles. We looked through entries specifically for roles related to management consulting and accounting. This data does not reflect performance bonuses, signing bonuses, and compensation other than base salaries.

Here's how much Deloitte, PwC, KPMG, and EY paid their hires.  

Deloitte paid senior managers between $91,603 to $288,000
Deloitte logo
Deloitte offers its top manager salaries close to mid six figures.

Artur Widak/Getty Images

With 457,000 employees worldwide, Deloitte employs the most people of any of the 'Big Four.' It pulled in close to $64.9 billion in revenue for the 2023 fiscal year, marking a 9.4% increase from 2022.

Deloitte did not immediately respond to a request for comment on its salary data or 2024 hiring plans.

Here are the salary ranges for consulting and accounting roles: 

  • Analyst: $49,219 to $337,500 (includes advisory, business, project delivery, management, and systems)
  • Senior business analyst: $97,739 
  • Audit and assurance senior assistant: average $58,895
  • Consultant: $54,475 to $125,000 (includes advisory, technology strategy, and strategic services)  
  • Global business process lead: $180,000 
  • Senior consultant: average $122,211
  • Manager: average $152,971
  • Tax manager: average $117,268
  • Senior manager: $91,603 to $288,000  
  • Managing director: average $326,769
  • Tax managing director: average $248,581
  • Principal: $225,000 to $875,000
Principals at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) can make well over $1 million.
logo of PwC
PwC.

Danish Siddiqui/Reuters

PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) is a global professional services firm with over 370,000 employees worldwide. The firm reported a revenue of more than $53 billion for the 2023 fiscal year, marking a 5.6% increase from 2022. 

PwC did not immediately respond to a request for comment on its salary data or 2024 hiring plans.

Here are the salary ranges for both consulting and accounting roles. 

  • Associate: $68,000 to $145,200
  • Senior associate: $72,000 to $197,000 
  • Manager: $114,300 to $231,000
  • Senior manager: $142,000 to $251,000 
  • Director: $165,000 to $400,000  
  • Managing director: $260,000 to $330,600
  • Principal: $1,081,182 to $1,376,196
KPMG offers managing directors anywhere between $230,000 to $485,000
The logo of KPMG, a multinational tax advisory and accounting services company, hangs on the facade of a KPMG offices building on January 22, 2021 in Berlin, Germany.
KPMG managing directors can earn close to half a million.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

KPMG has over 273,000 employees worldwide. The firm reported a revenue of $36 billion for the 2023 fiscal year, marking a 5% increase from 2022. 

KPMG did not immediately respond to a request for comment on its salary data or 2024 hiring plans.

Here are the salary ranges for consultants, accountants, and leadership at KPMG. 

  • Associate: $61,000 to $140,000
  • Senior associate: $66,248 to $215,000
  • Director: $155,600 to $260,000
  • Associate director: $155,700 to $196,600 
  • Specialist director: $174,000 to $225,000
  • Lead specialist: $140,500 to $200,000
  • Senior specialist: $134,000 to $155,000
  • Manager: $99,445 to $293,800
  • Senior manager: $110,677 to $332,800
  • Managing director: $230,000 to $485,000
Statisticians at Ernst & Young (EY) make salaries ranging between $66,000 to $283,500.
Pedestrians walk in front of the entrance to EY's head office in London.
EY spends $500 million annually on learning for its employees.

TOLGA AKMEN / Contributor / Getty

EY employs close to 400,000 people worldwide. For the 2023 fiscal year, the firm reported a record revenue of $49.4 billion, marking a 9.3% jump from 2022. 

The firm did not immediately respond to a request for comment on its salary data or 2024 hiring plans.

Here are the salary ranges for consultants, accountants, auditors, and chief executives at the firm: 

  • Accountants and auditors: $54,000 to $390,000
  • Appraisers and assessors of real estate: $166,626 to $185,444
  • Computer systems analyst: $62,000 to $367,510
  • Management analyst: $49,220 to $337,500
  • Statistician: $66,000 to $283,500
  • Financial risk specialist: $62,000 to $342,400
  • Actuaries: $84,800 to $291,459
  • Economist: $77,000 to $141,000
  • Logisticians: $72,000 t0 $275,000
  • Mathematicians: $165,136 to $377,000
  • Computer and information systems manager: $136,167 to $600,000
  • Financial manager: average $320,000

Aman Kidwai and Weng Cheong contributed to an earlier version of this post. 

Read the original article on Business Insider

Macy's $132 million mystery has auditing experts scratching their heads

Shoppers outside Macy's Herald Square
Macy's found a significant accounting error from an employee.

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

  • Macy's said it discovered an employee intentionally made accounting errors totaling $132 to $154 million.
  • Auditing experts told BI the available evidence suggests a failure of internal accounting controls.
  • They said the issue should have been caught much earlier —regardless of any single employee's intent.

In accounting as in air travel, a common saying applies: "If you see something, say something."

Following the news that Macy's discovered a sizable error in its financial records, auditing experts told Business Insider that the company must now explain how its controls broke down.

The retailer said Monday that it was delaying its quarterly earnings release after discovering an employee deliberately made an accounting error totaling between $132 million and $154 million over three years.

Even in a situation where someone intentionally introduced errors to a company's books, former KPMG partner Jerry Maginnis said, "Your system of internal control should have caught it."

Since retiring from the accounting firm in 2015, Maginnis now serves on the audit committees of several companies and is an executive in residence at Rowan University. He said he never handled financial records for Macy's, which has been audited by KPMG since 1988.

"Somebody else should have been reviewing and catching it, and so this was a breakdown in internal control as well as bad accounting," Maginnis told BI.

Macy's said it fired an individual who "intentionally made erroneous accounting accrual entries" and launched an investigation. The employee had "responsibility for small package delivery expense accounting," the company said.

The retailer said that it spent $4.36 billion on small package delivery expenses in the three years that the error had been taking place, making the error less than 5% of that line item. According to Macy's press release, no money was improperly spent.

The employee's potential motives and exactly what went wrong is likely to be the subject of investigation by Macy's audit committee, KPMG, and others, accounting experts told Business Insider.

The last time Macy's reported a major accounting issue was in 2006 when the company restated financials over a "cash flow classification," according to Ideagen Audit Analytics, a research and data provider.

Monday's announcement preceded Macy's regularly scheduled third-quarter earnings report. The company said its next update will come on December 11.

"If they weren't going to delay their earnings, we probably never would've heard about this," said Michelle Leder, the author of a book about reading financial statements who now runs the website Footnoted, which analyzes securities filings. "You could argue that maybe they've already disclosed more than they're required to disclose."

Without more details, the accounting experts who spoke to BI said it is hard to understand exactly what happened.

One possible explanation may be as simple as "sometimes accountants make mistakes," said Francine McKenna, a former accounting professional who now publishes The Dig newsletter about accounting topics and auditing firms.

"Sometimes errors accumulate, and then what happens is you go into preservation mode," she added. "You just keep perpetuating the error in order to hide it because you don't want to raise your hand and say, 'An error happened, I couldn't get it fixed for a year and a half, and now the number is really big.'"

While stronger internal controls could shift some of the onus off of individuals having to make that choice, Maginnis also said that the accounting profession depends on individuals having a personal commitment to tell the truth at all times.

Regulations set by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which require public companies to maintain effective internal controls, are intended to catch mistakes like this much earlier and provide an avenue for audit firms to issue warnings about company controls.

The pressure will now be on Macy's auditor, KPMG, to show that it is appropriately scrutinizing Macy's accounting practices and controls, McKenna said.

"I wouldn't be surprised if you'll see a material weakness in internal controls because something is not working here," McKenna said. "There was a hole somewhere."


Read the original article on Business Insider

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