Women’s ambitions to become entrepreneurs are rising, according to early findings from ACCA’s forthcoming Global Talent Trends 2026 report.

Kuala Lumpur, Friday, 6 March 2026— New survey data shows that 50% of women working in finance and accountancy in Malaysia now aspire to become entrepreneurs, up from 43% last year. The findings come from early insights from ACCA’s global survey of more than 11,000 finance professionals across 175 countries, with the full report due for publication in May 2026.

The increase signals growing confidence among women in using accountancy and finance training as a springboard for business ownership. While entrepreneurial ambitions remain higher among men overall, the narrowing gap reflects a significant shift in career confidence and long-term aspirations among women professionals.

The data also indicates that entrepreneurial ambition is most pronounced among younger female professionals, particularly Generation Z and Millennials, with half suggesting they want to be entrepreneurs in the future. This trend points to a generational drive towards autonomy, impact and financial independence.

The findings were released ahead of International Women’s Day 2026 and align with the global theme set by UN Women: Rights. Justice. Action. For ALL women and girls.”

“Entrepreneurship represents economic empowerment in action. The number of women aspiring to business ownership is an encouraging signal that finance and accountancy skills are equipping women not only to lead within organisations, but to build enterprises of their own. Accountancy provides a powerful platform for entrepreneurial success, combining financial expertise, governance, risk management, technology and strategic insight. Supporting women to translate ambition into enterprise is essential not just for equality, but for economic growth,” said Helen Brand, chief executive of ACCA.

The Global Talent Trends 2026 data shows that accountancy remains a natural training ground for future business owners, with over half of respondents overall viewing their finance background as beneficial for entrepreneurial careers. Ambitions are particularly strong in emerging markets, where entrepreneurship is often seen as a pathway to economic mobility and societal impact.

The research also highlights that women’s entrepreneurial aspirations sit within a broader redefinition of the accountancy profession. Many finance professionals increasingly seek roles aligned to purpose, social impact, environmental sustainability and personal autonomy. This underscores the expanding role of accountancy as a gateway to entrepreneurship and economic empowerment.

“The drive towards entrepreneurship is especially evident among younger finance professionals. They see accountancy as more than a technical discipline; it is a launchpad for innovation, independence, and impact. While there remains more progress to be made to achieve parity, the direction of travel is clear. The profession is helping to unlock entrepreneurial potential at scale,” saidAndrew Lim, head of ACCA Maritime South-East Asia

International Women’s Day provides an important moment to reflect on how professions can support equitable access to opportunity. Unlocking women’s entrepreneurial potential has well-documented economic benefits globally, including increased job creation, innovation and productivity.