
Assistant Professor, University of Portland
Claire Costin is an assistant professor with the Pamplin School of Business at the University of Portland. She holds a Ph.D. from the University of Texas at San Antonio, an MBA from St. Edward’s University, and a Bachelor’s of Music in piano performance from the University of Texas at Austin. Her research focuses on the impact of social capital on earnings management and how cultural factors influence managerial decision-making, with ongoing projects exploring implicit bias in accounting professionals.
Before pursuing her Ph.D, Claire worked as an auditor in Austin and remains a licensed CPA in Texas. She is also a member of the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE). Claire’s teaching interests include financial accounting, auditing, and forensic accounting, and she enjoys engaging students with research on how human behavior impacts the profession.
In addition to her academic work, Claire volunteers on the University of Portland’s Committee on Academic Regulations and serves as Treasurer for the Alpha Phi Foundation. She is also a chapter advisor for the University of Oregon’s Alpha Phi chapter and has worked on the fraternity’s Alumnae Task Force on Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Access.
More By Claire
External Research
Re-Decoding the Decline
A national survey by the Illinois Society of CPAs of 7,780 students and young professionals reveals what’s driving CPA career decisions. The 2024 report uncovers key perceptions, challenges, and deterrents shaping the pipeline—offering critical insights the profession can’t ignore.
Completed Research
The Cost of Losing Talent: Why Belonging is Essential for Firm Resilience & Growth
The 2025 Accounting MOVE Project highlights a critical moment as talent shortages, declining CPA pursuit, and leadership retirements converge. The study calls for clarity and action, showing how culture and opportunity shape who enters, stays, and advances.
External Research
The Cost of Losing Talent
The 2025 Accounting MOVE Project examines how evolving attitudes toward diversity, equity, and inclusion are influencing the accounting profession at a critical moment marked by severe talent shortages and leadership transitions. The report explores how workplace culture, belonging, and equitable advancement practices directly affect firms’ ability to attract, retain, and develop professionals. It highlights the strategic risks of disengagement, shares insights from participating firms, and reinforces inclusion as a practical business imperative essential to the profession’s long-term resilience, competitiveness, and growth.
Active Research
Caregiving & the Sandwich Generation
What happens when the profession’s most experienced leaders are stretched between peak career demands and growing caregiving responsibilities? The 2026 Accounting MOVE Project survey explores how caregiving is reshaping retention, advancement, and succession in public accounting — and what firms must rethink to protect their future.
External Research
Re-Decoding the Decline: An Updated View of the CPA Pipeline Crisis
Using proprietary data from the Illinois CPA Society’s pipeline survey, we explore factors affecting the decision to pursue a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) credential. The survey asked about their intention to pursue a CPA, whether they expected to be a CPA, the value of the CPA, and their intention to pursue credentials other than the CPA. Using 7,780 survey responses from students and young professionals, we find that both intrinsic and external factors affect the decision to pursue a CPA certification. We also find differences in the student and non-student subsamples. We perform textual analysis using responses to open-ended questions and find that participants identify financial concerns, mental health, work-life balance, and perceived value of the credential as factors in their decision. Overall, our results provide insight into why students and young professionals choose to pursue a CPA credential and suggest areas of focus for improving the accounting pipeline.
Active Research
The Cost of Losing Talent Research Study
What is the real cost of losing talent? The 2025 Accounting MOVE Project delivers benchmarking research on workforce trends, teamwork, and firm resilience. Explore the study and insights shaping the profession.

