Q&A
with a CPA Personal Financial Planner
By
Tekecha Morgan, Marketing Coordinator
The Trusted
Professional sat down recently with personal financial planner
and past Society President Stuart Kessler, CPA, PFS,
JD, to discuss some of the most pressing issues concerning the practice
of personal financial planning. In addition to his prior service as
Society President (1984–1985), Kessler also has served as President
of the Foundation of Accounting Education and currently serves on the
NYSSCPA’s Tax Division Oversight and Development of the Profession
Oversight committees. Kessler also has served as chairman of the American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) Board of Directors
and as President of the AICPA Foundation.
Q: How
do you define “personal financial planning”?
A: Personal financial planning is a holistic review of all
of the aspects of a client’s financial life. After taking into
account their goals and objectives, the financial planner must create
a practical program for the client and help implement it.
Q: What
advice would you give to a CPA tax practitioner considering entering
the financial planning field? What about a more audit-based practitioner?
A: Since personal financial planning requires continuous knowledge
in many nonaudit areas it is my feeling that it is more suitable for
a tax practitioner. I would encourage the practitioners who want to
broaden their experience to take continuing professional education courses,
such as the upcoming Personal Financial Planning Conference sponsored
by the NYSSCPA’s Personal Financial Planning Committee and the
Foundation for Accounting Education.
With respect to
my opinion that audit-based practitioners not consider personal financial
planning as part of their practice, I would make an exception for the
sole practitioner who is the traditional “hand-holding”
CPA. The sole practitioner can be extremely helpful to their clients
in accounting and audit areas as well as the financial planning area,
although it will take a great deal of time to keep up with new developments.
Q: Based
on your experience in giving financial planning advice, what are some
common mistakes that your clients made prior to meeting with you?
A: Common mistakes include not diversifying investments, not
updating estate documents—including wills, power of attorney,
etc.—carrying unnecessary debt, lack of communicating with their
professional advisors, being under- or overinsured, not having excess
liability insurance coverage and failure to plan for retirement, among
others.
Q: What
is the role of CPAs with clients’ long-term care issues?
A: The CPA/financial planner should review the necessity for
a client to have long-term care coverage. For many, long-term care insurance
will be the key to survival in the event of a medical emergency. To
others, long-term care insurance will serve to provide funds in the
event of a long-term care medical emergency. In the latter cases, I
discuss the fact that paying for long-term care insurance is in effect
a potential gift to their heirs because they will be saving their assets
for their children’s inheritance.
Q: What
is the role of investment and insurance products within a financial
plan?
A: Both investment planning and the need, or lack of need,
for insurance are important key elements within a financial plan. However,
whether a CPA can effectively offer financial products is a somewhat
controversial area. I am of the firm belief that the CPA/financial planner
should not sell products. However, there are a growing number of successful
CPA/financial planners who hold the opposite view. It is a continuing
subject of debate.
Q: What
is the role of the NYSSCPA and the AICPA in helping CPAs understand
the importance of helping clients with their financial planning issues?
A: Both organizations have financial planning committees that
provide their respective members with an understanding of how financial
planning issues are of great importance to their clients. Both organizations
sponsor annual conferences which serve to cover a myriad of financial
planning subjects, and are informative and well attended.
Q: Many
studies have shown Americans to be generally financially illiterate.
What do you think can or should be done about this lack of knowledge
in the financial planning area?
A: The AICPA has instituted a program called 360 Degrees of
Financial Literacy, and the NYSSCPA also participates in this program.
Although programs like this will not necessarily solve the problem,
it is an important component to raising the overall financial literacy
of the general public. The more we bring financial literacy to all segments
of our population, the better off we all will be.