
As a CFA charterholder in investments, I have no problem paying a premium of 20%-50% over an accountant or a CPA. However, at the Ohio State Teachers’ Retirement it is in a different League. The Average investment staffer at $180,693 makes 101% of the average accounting staffer at $89,686. The Chief Investment Officer at $913,909 makes 371% of the Chief Financial officer at $193,933.
Ohio STRS has a long and sordid relationship with Jeffrey Epstein-linked Apollo, but chooses to look the other way. https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/02/23/epstein-apollo-and-ohio-teachers-billions/ https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/04/17/apollo-divestment-case-for-jeffrey-epstein-ties-stronger-after-wyden-letter/
These salaries at 2x to 6x do not reflect the Private Market but a corrupt system in which investment employees are demanding and getting higher compensation to look the other way at corruption. Columbus OH, has a lower-than-average cost of living. https://commonsense401kproject.com/2025/10/31/columbus-the-highest-public-salaries-in-america-and-ohio-teachers-are-paying-for-it/
Typical Ratio CFA to CPA pay differential in Private Sector (Apples-to-Apples)
- Early career: ~1.2x – 1.5x
- Mid career: ~1.3x – 2x
- Senior roles: ~1.5x – 2.5x
STRS hired a corrupt Governance Consultant, GCA to make false claims about market equivalents.
The people who control opaque investments are paid multiples of those responsible for verifying them.
The Numbers: CFA vs CPA in Ohio Pensions
Let’s strip this down to reality.
Investment Staff (CFA Track)
- Chief Investment Officer: $250k – $900k+
- Senior Investment Staff: $150k – $400k
- Investment Staff: $100k – $250k
Accounting / Audit Staff (CPA Track)
- CFO / Controller: $110k – $190k
- Senior Accountant: $70k – $110k
- Staff Accountant: $50k – $80k
Same System. Same Assets. Completely Different Pay Logic.
Inside the same pension systems:
- An investment officer can make 2x–4x a senior accountant
- A CIO can make 5x–10x the people responsible for financial controls
And here’s the part no one says out loud:
The CPA side is the only group even remotely positioned to challenge valuations, fees, and financial reporting.
Who Controls the Truth?
This is not just about compensation. It’s about control.
The CFA Side Controls:
- Private equity allocations
- Private credit portfolios
- Valuation inputs
- “Benchmark engineering”
- Performance narratives
The CPA Side Controls:
- Financial statements
- Audit trails
- Compliance checks
- Disclosure integrity
Now ask the obvious question:
Which side is incentivized—and paid—to ask hard questions?
Private Equity: Where the Money—and Incentives—Explode
This gap didn’t happen by accident.
It coincides almost perfectly with the explosion of:
- Private equity
- Private credit
- Illiquid “alternative” investments
These assets:
- Do not have transparent pricing
- Rely on manager-provided valuations
- Generate massive fee streams
And most importantly:
They require far less accountability when the people reviewing them are underpaid and structurally marginalized.
The Structural Problem
Ohio didn’t just create a pay gap.
It created a governance imbalance:
- The dealmakers are rewarded for growth and complexity and high secret fees for managers
- The watchdogs are underpaid and outgunned
That imbalance leads to predictable outcomes:
- Selection by secret no-bid contracts no RFP’s
- Weak internal challenge to valuations
- Limited scrutiny of private equity contracts
- Acceptance of “black box” returns
- Rising fees with little resistance
The Real Question: Is This a Feature, Not a Bug?
When you see a system where:
- The highest-paid employees control opaque investments
- The lowest-paid professionals verify them
- And the governing boards rely heavily on the former
You have to ask:
Is this structure designed to prevent oversight rather than enable it?
Why Ohio Teachers and Workers Should Care
Every dollar paid in:
- Excess fees
- Inflated valuations
- Underperforming private markets
…comes out of:
- Teacher pensions
- Public worker retirement security
- Taxpayer backstops
And yet:
The people positioned to detect those problems are paid like mid-level clerks.
Ohio media has focused on Les Wexner’s Epstein role, but there is another one. https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/02/19/ohios-epstein-blind-spot-while-wexner-dominates-headlines-apollos-leon-black-remains-in-shadows/
Apollos Leon Black is not getting looked at most likely because media giants like the Columbus Dispatch are controlled by Apollo. https://commonsense401kproject.com/2025/08/22/ohio-medias-complicity-how-a-fake-scandal-hid-the-real-teacher-retirement-system-corruption/
A Simple Fix That No One Proposes
If Ohio were serious about fiduciary duty, it would:
- Lower Pay of investment staff to match Columbus OH market norms.
- Create independent valuation teams—not reporting to investment
- Require third-party pricing for illiquid assets
- Elevate CPA oversight to board-level authority
Instead, the system doubles down on the opposite.
This will not happen if Ramaswamy is elected Governor https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/03/18/vivek-ramaswamy-private-equity-and-ohios-public-pensions/
Bottom Line
Ohio pensions have made a choice:
Pay the people who create complexity and fees for Wall Street excessively —and understaff and underpay the people who question it.
Until that changes, nothing else will.

















