▲ 8 r/u_Dangerous_Fox5662+6 crossposts

Genuine Career question

If a CA and an MBA (Finance) from a decent college have the same skills, knowledge, and work ethic, does the CA qualification still provide a long-term advantage?

Does being a CA help you get roles, credibility, or opportunities that an MBA typically reaches only after 5–10 years of experience? Or after a few years, does only performance and experience matter?

Would love to hear from recruiters and professionals who’ve worked with both or one.

Pls give some real advices.

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u/Dangerous_Fox5662 — 2 days ago
▲ 3 r/u_Dangerous_Fox5662+2 crossposts

Is CA necessary?

I have given 3 attempts of CA inter and not able to clear it and now i can't study mtlb i even can't able to focus 1 hr and i was back then got 95% in class 12th CBSE board so i was very good student back then..and i don't like audit i don't like law and tax and all..i just opt CA because of my all cousins were doing...Currently i am 20 and thinking to learn skills various skills and get multiple internships and having real exposure where i need to be and what i am good at and after that have work experience of 1 to 2 year and then having mba from decent college...is this a good way to get in future because i can't study even about CA so i don't think so i can sustain in this course or any other professional course rn..

Am i thinking right for me?

Pls give your advice..

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u/Dangerous_Fox5662 — 4 days ago