While potentially offering tremendous benefit, the broad applicability of AI across society must be handled carefully and professional accountants have a key role to play.
ACCA (the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants) and
Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand (CA ANZ) reveal in a new
report the pressing need for the accountancy profession to make the
necessary connections between Artificial Intelligence (AI) and its
relationship to environmental, social and governance (ESG) dimensions.
Polling over 5,700 respondents across 21 countries and geographies,
the research reveals a cautious tone, with fewer than half (43%)
believing that the impact of AI on their rights as an individual is
positive – such as safety and personal security, and levels of fairness,
choice and transparency.
ACCA and CA ANZ say in Ethics for sustainable AI adoption: Connecting AI and ESG
that professional accountants, with their explicit and long-standing
commitment to ethical practices, are well placed to guide organisations
along a responsible path for AI adoption.
This presents a wake-up call for the accountancy profession to lead
the way and become the super connectors needed to ensure an ethical
approach. Their management of the transition to mass usage of AI in an
ethical, responsible manner is essential if sustainable long-term value
is to be secured from it.
The report’s nine recommendations include the need to set tone at the top on AI adoption by prioritising
an approach that is consistent with organisational values such as
diversity and inclusion in considering the impact of AI on
under-represented groups, or fairness when it comes to recruitment or
surveillance of employees; and transparency such as appropriately
disclosing AI use to customers.
Another recommendation for the profession is to challenge
greenwashing and seek insights from AI tools to help with professional
scepticism in examining whether the organisation's claims about
sustainability, such as on achieving net zero targets, are matched by
its performance. Suspect claims need to be challenged.
Helen Brand, chief executive of ACCA says: ‘AI adoption must
consider the needs of all, especially the under-represented and
vulnerable in society. That’s why one of our recommendations is to
ensure the profession exercises its professional judgement, because AI
may create previously unseen situations. We recommend that professional
accountants need to avoid over-reliance on simplistic checklist-based
approaches which don’t give the full picture or leave space for
unintended consequences.’
Ainslie van Onselen, chief executive of CA ANZ adds: ‘Our report
found that in order to ethically and sustainably adopt AI, organisations
need effective governance mechanisms. This starts with setting the
right tone and culture at the top and covers a range of areas from
oversight and delivery procedures, to regulation and data governance. AI
is a strategic endeavour that should be spearheaded by leaders who know
and execute on the difference between what we have a right to do and
what is the right thing to do. It’s important to build knowledge and
skills at the intersection of AI, ethics and sustainable development.
This aligns well to the accountancy profession which can play a key role
in driving responsible adoption.’
Key findings from the research amongst accountancy and finance professionals show that:
- 66% believe that their leaders prioritise ethics as highly as profits.
- 64% believe that the impact of AI on overall standard of living in
society is positive, but only half that proportion (32%) consider its
impact on levels of inequality to be positive. On the latter with 28%
recording negative impact, the net positive balance was just 4%.
- Three in four report being effective / very effective at managing confidentiality, and two in three at managing data quality.
- Just over half (51%) believe that the impact of AI on their ability
to live according to their values is positive.31% are aware of AI use
within their industry. Fewer than half (48%) have a basic understanding
of how an AI algorithm works.
The global accountancy profession is bound by the Code of Ethics (the ‘Code’)
and its five fundamental principles as set out by the International
Ethics Standards Board for Accountants (IESBA). These are integrity,
objectivity, professional competence and due care, confidentiality, and
professional behaviour
Ethics for sustainable AI adoption: Connecting AI and ESG can be downloaded here: https://www.accaglobal.com/gb/en/professional-insights/technology/ai_ethics.html
© ACCA - Association of Chartered Certified Accountants
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