Job prospects Income Tax Expert in Saskatchewan

Explore current and future job prospects for people working as an "income tax expert" in Saskatchewan or across Canada.

Job opportunities in Saskatchewan

These outlooks were updated on December 11, 2024.

Prospects over the next 3 years

Good

The employment outlook will be good for Financial auditors and accountants (NOC 11100) in Saskatchewan for the 2024-2026 period.

The following factors contributed to this outlook:

  • Employment growth will lead to a moderate number of new positions.
  • A moderate number of positions will become available due to retirements.
  • There are a small number of unemployed workers with recent experience in this occupation.
  • Base services such as accounting and auditing are tied to general economic conditions and business cycle in the province. Coming out of an economic slowdown in 2023 and a projected sluggish growth for 2024, an expansion in 2025 and 2026 bodes well for employment in base service occupations such as this.
  • Generative AI-powered market intelligence solutions that deliver real time valuable insights for timely business decision making may impact jobs in the short to medium term in way that is quite uncertain and early to tell. 
  • Recent research shows more than half of employees in Business and Finance are in jobs that have high exposure but low complementarity to AI. 


Here are some key facts about Financial auditors and accountants in Saskatchewan:

  • Approximately 4,500 people work in this occupation.
  • Financial auditors and accountants mainly work in the following sectors:
    • Accounting, tax preparation, bookkeeping and payroll services (NAICS 5412): 40%
    • Other retail stores (NAICS 44-45, except 445): 6%
    • Federal government public administration (NAICS 911): 5%
  • The distribution of full-time and part-time workers in this occupation is:
    • Full-time workers: 91% compared to 81% for all occupations
    • Part-time workers: 9% compared to 19% for all occupations
  • 80% of financial auditors and accountants work all year, while 20% work only part of the year, compared to 65% and 35% respectively among all occupations. Those who worked only part of the year did so for an average of 47 weeks compared to 43 weeks for all occupations.
  • 16% of financial auditors and accountants are self-employed compared to an average of 16% for all occupations.
  • The gender distribution of people in this occupation is:
    • Men: 42% compared to 53% for all occupations
    • Women: 57% compared to 47% for all occupations
  • The educational attainment of workers in this occupation is:
    • no high school diploma: less than 5% compared to 11% for all occupations
    • high school diploma or equivalent: less than 5% compared to 33% for all occupations
    • apprenticeship or trades certificate or diploma: less than 5% compared to 15% for all occupations
    • college certificate or diploma or university certificate below bachelor's: 17% compared to 17% for all occupations
    • bachelor's degree: 59% compared to 18% for all occupations
    • university certificate, degree or diploma above bachelor level: 18% compared to 7% for all occupations

Breakdown by region

Explore job prospects in Saskatchewan by economic region.

Legend

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Undetermined
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Very limited
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Moderate
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Very good

Source Labour Market Information | Prospects Methodology

Job prospects elsewhere in Canada

Explore current and future job prospects for people working as an "income tax expert" Financial auditors and accountants (NOC 11100) or across Canada.

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Labour Market Information Survey
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