Accounting Students’ Skill Set Acquisition-Employers' Expectation Nexus in Ghana: Moderating Multicultural Plurality.

Authors

  • N. Amaning Sunyani Technical University, Ghana.
  • K. O. Amoako Sunyani Technical University, Ghana.
  • E. K. Gyau Sunyani Technical University image/svg+xml
  • P. Kwarteng

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26437/53qnsn10

Keywords:

Accounting education. employer demands. institutional theory. multicultural diversity skills acquisition.

Abstract

Purpose: This study examines how multicultural diversity moderates the relationship between pre-service accountants’ skills development and alignment with employer expectations in Ghana, considering institutional pressures as antecedents of skills acquisition.

Design/Methodology/Approach: A quantitative cross-sectional survey was used to collect data from 145 final-year undergraduate accounting students from 10 universities and 125 employers across three regions in Ghana. Partial least squares structural equation modelling (PLS-SEM) in SmartPLS-SEM 4.0 was used for data analysis.

Research Limitation: The study's cross-sectional design limits causal inference, and the geographical concentration in three Ghanaian regions with a focus on undergraduate programmes and managerial-level employers constrains generalizability across the broader accounting education sector and diverse stakeholder perspectives.

Findings: Technical, non-technical, and technological competencies significantly predict alignment with employer expectations. Multicultural diversity significantly moderates these associations, and institutional pressures play a crucial role in aligning employers’ demands with students’ skill set development.

Practical Implication: Accounting education institutions should strategically leverage multicultural diversity through cross-cultural pedagogical designs, while employers should recognise that graduates from culturally diverse learning environments demonstrate enhanced technical and non-technical competencies valued in globalised accounting practice.

Social Implication: Universities should recognise multicultural diversity as a pedagogical resource rather than a constraint, given its significant benefits for shaping students’ skill sets holistically.

Originality/value: The paper demonstrates that institutional pressures (coercive, normative, and mimetic) differentially shape distinct competency domains (technical, non-technical, and technological) through an integrated institutional theory-cultural capital theory framework in an emerging market context.

Author Biographies

  • N. Amaning, Sunyani Technical University, Ghana.

    Newman Amaning is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Accounting and Business Analytics at the Sunyani Technical University, Ghana.

  • K. O. Amoako, Sunyani Technical University, Ghana.

    Prof. Kwame Oduro Amoako is an Associate Professor in the Department of Accounting and Business Analytics at the Sunyani Technical University, Ghana.

  • E. K. Gyau, Sunyani Technical University

    Evans Kelvin Gyau is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Accounting and Business Analytics at the Sunyani Technical University, Ghana.

  • P. Kwarteng

    Peter Kwarteng is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Accounting and Business Analytics at the Sunyani Technical University, Ghana.

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Published

07-05-2026

How to Cite

Accounting Students’ Skill Set Acquisition-Employers’ Expectation Nexus in Ghana: Moderating Multicultural Plurality. (2026). AFRICAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED RESEARCH, 12(3), 341-378. https://doi.org/10.26437/53qnsn10