Confusing Nomenclature?
By Dr. David Edward Marcinko; MBA, CMP™
[Publisher-in-Chief]
Recently, John H. Robinson – a Honolulu based independent and dual-registered financial advisor who holds a degree in economics from Williams College and who has written and published numerous professional papers – essentially challenged the credibility of the College for Financial Planning.
“Dr. [Somnath] Basu [PhD] is quite correct in pointing out that the College for Financial Planning is not academically accredited and there are no admissions standards other than a nominal three year industry experience standard (three years as a clerk in a brokerage firm will qualify). Mr. [Kevin] Keller [CEO-CFP BoS] defends the curriculum by stating that, “Topics include economic concepts such as supply and demand, fiscal and monetary policy, time-value of money concepts…” The mere fact that that no prior college level academic experience in finance is required is testament to the fact that the coursework is largely 101 level materials.
To illustrate this point by example, economics represents one small chapter of the Investments section of the CFP curriculum. In contrast, econometrics and statistics alone was a semester long 300 level course in my undergraduate economics studies. This is not to suggest that the CFP program does not provide adequate training and preparation for a career in financial planning, but to assert that the CFP designation trumps a graduate or even undergraduate degree in finance or economics is difficult to defend. This was my counterpoint to Mr. [Dan] Moisand’s bellicose labeling of non-CFP certificants as “faux planners”.
Source: http://www.fa-mag.com/online-extras/4037-revisiting-cfp-credentialing.html
Moreover, he stated that:
”In fairness, some of Dr. Basu’s ideals on the educational standards for financial planning certification seem a bit extreme as well. For instance, I can’t imagine subjecting doctors, attorneys, or even business school professors to periodic recertification exams.”
Source: http://www.fa-mag.com/online-extras/4037-revisiting-cfp-credentialing.html
The Big Question
And so, the big question for financial advisors and Certified Financial Planners®: Is the College for Financial Planning, a college at all? Is it accredited and more importantly, who accredits it? If not; why not? And, was the name “college” purposely selected to obfuscate?
Moreover, and of more importance to our physician readers, FAs and ME-P subscribers: Do doctors, attorneys or business school professors need to periodically recertify themselves by examinations?
IOW: Is Mr. Robinson correct or not – in fact or meaning – on one or both accounts? How about Dan Moisand? Am I, or Mr. Robinson, a “faux” planner?
Assessment
A paper co-authored by Mr. Robinson, entitled, “Reality Check: The implications of sustainable withdrawal analysis on real world portfolios” was awarded the CFP Board of Standards’ 2008 Outstanding Paper Award. He does not hold the CFP® designation.
Disclosure
Among many other “hats”, I am a former licensed insurance agent, certified financial planner, board certified surgeon, visiting B-school professor, and current academic provost for the CMP™ online program in health economics and medical practice management for fiduciary consultants. Our goal is to “raise the bar” for all colleagues in this space.
Update 2013:
- CFP Board Allows Wirehouse Advisors to Call Themselves Fee-Only
- CFP Board Strips Fee-Only Listing From its Website
- Ex-CFP Board Disciplinary Official Says Board Punished Her Amid Lawsuit Fears
Recent:
- Concern About CFP Board Controversy Hits Colleges That Teach Planning
- CFP Board Reinstates Fee-Only Search Function On Its Website
- Early CFP Board Leader Says Future of Certification in Jeopardy
- CFP Board Strips ‘Fee-Only’ Listing From Its Website
- CFP Board Allows Wirehouse Advisors to Call Themselves Fee-Only on Its Website
Conclusion
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Filed under: "Advisors Only", Ethics, Financial Planning, Glossary Terms, Quality Initiatives, Research & Development, Sponsors | Tagged: CFP, CFP BoS, college for financial planning, Dan Moisand, david marcinko, financial advisors, financial planners, financial planning association, FPA, John H. Robinson, Kevin Keller, Somnath Basu | 21 Comments »















