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Intuit and Education at Work launch college program to fill accounting pipeline

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Intuit and Education at Work, a national work-based learning nonprofit, announced a pilot program to help college students working in tax, accounting and financial services gain experience while earning tuition money.

The program launches in the fall semester of 2024 and will include up to 60 undergraduate students from Arizona State University. Participants will work in paid part-time roles at Intuit’s TurboTax while earning up to $5,250 in tuition assistance. Students will have the opportunity to transition into roles in Intuit’s Expert Network, based on job performance, where they can gain additional training and earn certifications.

“This is an opportunity for Intuit to build a diverse and more robust pipeline of students who will be exposed to and then hopefully become more interested in making tax and accounting their career path moving forward,” said former Massachusetts Gov. Jane Swift, president and CEO of Education at Work.

Since its founding in 2012, Education at Work has awarded over $107 million in combined wages and tuition assistance to nearly 8,000 students nationwide. It works with companies with existing mid-skill workforce shortages and trains college students to fill those pipeline gaps on a flexible, part-time basis. 

For full-time students who need to work while in school, it is often difficult to balance rigid work schedules with academic schedules. 

“Work becomes a barrier to completion, even though it’s a necessity in order to pay for the education. We flip that model on its head,” Swift said. “We have an innovative workforce management model where we are able to adjust students’ schedules every semester so that they accommodate their academic schedules, rather than asking them to do the hard work of arranging an academic schedule that meets their work schedule.”

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Swift experienced this struggle first-hand. As a student, she received Pell Grants, state and federal financial aid and worked throughout her four years in college. She explained, “The work we do at Education at Work is predicated on that every student should have the same access to experience networks and upskilling and then a first good job out of college.”

Education at Work targets university partners with large percentages of traditionally underserved students, such as students of color, first-generation students and students who are on Pell Grants. In working with partner companies, like Intuit, Education at Work is the employer of record and handles recruiting, background checks, training and performance monitoring.

Swift says Education at Work is a good opportunity for accounting firms looking for innovative models to meet their current and future workforce needs.

“We always have far more students than we have jobs available, and so our biggest challenge is finding more employers who are willing to embrace this model,” Swift said. “Our employers are very sticky. Once they start working with us, they see great returns. A lot of their full-time employees love the fact that our students will cover nights and weekends, and they also tend to get trained faster and meet the KPIs.”

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Tech roundup: Intuit guarantees tax refunds 5 Days early into any bank account

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Intuit guarantees tax refunds 5 Days early into any bank account; IRIS beefs up Firm Management solution, customer success function; and other accounting tech news and updates.

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Accounting

Ex-Credit Suisse client charged by US amid tax evasion probe

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A former Credit Suisse Group AG client was charged with a tax-evasion conspiracy in the U.S. as officials weigh whether the bank — now owned by UBS Group AG — breached a 2014 plea deal in which it paid $2.6 billion and admitted helping thousands of Americans evade taxes.

Gilda Rosenberg, a Florida businesswoman, conspired with two family members in hiding $90 million in assets from the Internal Revenue Service between 2010 and 2017, federal prosecutors charged Wednesday. She’s accused of acting to conceal money in undeclared foreign accounts while also filing false returns and evading taxes on unreported income. 

The extent to which Credit Suisse complied with its plea deal took on new focus after a 2023 Senate Finance Committee report said there were “major violations” of its agreement that requires the bank to identify undeclared U.S. accounts to the IRS. In the report, Democratic staff on the committee said the bank had still failed to fully disclose US assets despite having identified “thousands of previously undeclared accounts” valued at more than $1.3 billion. 

In response to the report, Credit Suisse said it was cooperating and had provided information to U.S. authorities on potentially undeclared accounts held by American clients.

A spokesman for UBS declined to comment Thursday on the case against Rosenberg. An attorney for Rosenberg declined to comment.   

Telling the IRS

The 2023 report doesn’t name the Rosenbergs but describes how the bank allegedly helped a family of dual citizens of the U.S. and Latin American country evade taxes. Whistleblowers told the committee the family members held nearly $100 million at Credit Suisse for a decade before transferring those assets to other banks without telling the IRS. 

The charge against Rosenberg doesn’t identify Credit Suisse, but refer to the same allegations described in the Senate report, according to people familiar with the matter. U.S. authorities are weighing whether the Swiss bank breached the terms of its 2014 deal, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing internal discussions.

UBS said in its third-quarter report that it had a provision for potential costs tied to inquiries into its cross-border wealth management services, including Credit Suisse’s compliance with the 2014 plea deal. It didn’t disclose an amount for the provision.

UBS could announce a settlement with prosecutors for violating terms of the 2014 deal as soon as this week, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday. The bank could agree to pay at least hundreds of millions of dollars, according to the report. The UBS spokesperson declined to comment on a possible settlement. 

Under its plea agreement with the U.S., Credit Suisse had to disclose all undeclared U.S. accounts closed and transferred from 2008 to 2014. Disclosing those account holders, known as “leaver lists,” was a U.S. requirement for Credit Suisse, several other Swiss banks that faced criminal charges, and 80 Swiss banks that made deals to avoid prosecution.

At the time of the report in 2023, Senator Ron Wyden, the Oregon Democrat who chairs the committee, slammed “greedy Swiss bankers” who appeared to be engaged in a “massive, ongoing conspiracy to help ultra-wealthy U.S. citizens to evade taxes.”

The report was released around the same time that Credit Suisse was being sold to rival UBS in a 3 billion franc ($3.3 billion) deal brokered by the Swiss government after years of scandal and mismanagement. 

‘Donate’ assets

Gilda Rosenberg was charged in a so-called criminal information. In a separate case last year, she pleaded guilty in Texas to conspiracy to commit wire fraud involving a Miami vending machine company she owns. She is scheduled to be sentenced on April 30. 

Rosenberg, a U.S. citizen, was born in Colombia and lives in south Florida, according to the tax charge. She conspired with two family members also born in Colombia, the U.S. alleges. They hid money in accounts in Switzerland, Spain, Israel and Andorra, prosecutors charged. 

Rosenberg and one relative agreed to sign documents purporting to “donate” assets in undeclared accounts to the other relative, the U.S. alleges. She also caused her return preparer to underreport income to the IRS and falsely say she had no interest in a foreign financial account, according to the charge.  

Since the bank’s 2014 guilty plea, other U.S. clients of Credit Suisse have been charged in tax cases. In 2016, Dan Horsky pleaded guilty to hiding more than $200 million in assets from the IRS. A Brazilian-American businessman, Dan Rotta, was indicted last year for allegedly using Credit Suisse, UBS and other Swiss banks to hide more than $20 million in assets from U.S. tax authorities over 35 years.

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Accounting

Deadline extended for Top New Products submissions

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Due to extensive interest, Accounting Today has extended the deadline for submissions to its 2025 Top New Products report. Submissions, which were originally due Jan. 10, can now be made until the end of the day on Wednesday, Jan. 15.

The report will recognize the best new and significantly improved products aimed at tax and accounting professionals, as judged by the editors of Accounting Today.

Products for consideration must be designed for the tax and accounting profession; must have been released no earlier than January 2024; and must be currently available (i.e., not in beta testing) in the U.S. market.

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Submissions must include:

  • Release date;
  • Pricing;
  • A website URL and/or phone number for customer contact;
  • 200 words or less describing the product’s functionality and its relevance to the tax and accounting profession; and
  • A digital image or logo for the product, if available (images can be in JPG, EPS or TIFF format, at 300 dpi or higher).

We will accept up to three submissions per vendor, or three per major division of a vendor.

Submissions may be sent by email to our technology editor, Chris Gaetano, at [email protected],

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