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AI in Practice: Opportunities, Risks and Responsibilities for Mediterranean Accountants

July 28, 2025
July 28, 2025

Introduction: Beyond Theory, Into Daily Practice

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is no longer a concept reserved for future planning — it is already in active use across accounting offices, audit firms, tax practices, and public finance departments. In the Mediterranean region, professionals are beginning to deploy AI in practical and measurable ways, improving efficiency, precision, and the value of services provided. Yet these applications come not only with opportunities, but with complexity. Each use case demands a balance between innovation and caution, automation and accountability.

This article explores real and emerging applications of AI in the accounting profession, highlighting their benefits and risks within the Mediterranean context. It also considers how legislation and professional self-regulation can help secure an ethical and sustainable transformation.


1. Automated Document Processing and Classification

AI tools are increasingly used to extract, categorise, and structure financial data from invoices, contracts, tax documents and bank records. These solutions reduce manual workloads and free up professionals for more strategic tasks.

Opportunities and Benefits:

  • Faster onboarding and processing of large volumes of documents.
  • Fewer manual errors and more consistent data structuring.
  • Increased operational scalability, especially during peak periods.

Risks and Safeguards:

  • Risk of misclassification if models are poorly trained or insufficiently localised.
  • Client data security requires strong encryption and infrastructure safeguards.
  • Manual validation remains essential for compliance-critical processes.

2. Natural Language Reporting and Advisory Narratives

Generative AI is now capable of producing readable summaries of financial results, projections, and audit findings. These outputs are often used as first drafts, refined and approved by professionals.

Opportunities and Benefits:

  • Time saved in drafting internal and client-facing documentation.
  • More accessible communication of complex financial insights.
  • Standardisation of tone and structure in recurring reports.

Risks and Safeguards:

  • Risk of overconfidence in machine-generated text, which may be factually incorrect.
  • Professionals must fact-check and remain responsible for final versions.
  • Clients should be informed about AI’s role in generating documentation.

3. Continuous Monitoring and Anomaly Detection

AI systems are now being applied to analyse transactions in real time, detecting patterns that deviate from expected behaviour and triggering alerts.

Opportunities and Benefits:

  • Early warning of potential fraud or data inconsistencies.
  • Real-time internal control and assurance capabilities.
  • Increased confidence among clients and stakeholders.

Risks and Safeguards:

  • High volume of false positives can lead to inefficiencies.
  • Anomalies must be defined with contextual understanding of business norms.
  • Auditable records and clear human oversight remain essential.

4. AI-Augmented Tax Research and Legal Interpretation

AI-powered tools trained on legal and fiscal content support professionals in navigating complex, evolving legislation and jurisprudence.

Opportunities and Benefits:

  • Faster access to relevant cases, rulings, and articles.
  • Enhanced drafting of technical memos and compliance notes.
  • Improved competitiveness of smaller firms.

Risks and Safeguards:

  • Inaccurate legal interpretation due to generalised or non-localised training data.
  • Final legal responsibility always rests with the professional.
  • Clear jurisdictional boundaries must be built into AI tools.

5. Advisory Dashboards and Client-Facing Analytics

AI enables the generation of interactive dashboards that offer real-time KPIs, visual reports, and customised financial scenarios for clients.

Opportunities and Benefits:

  • Accountants become strategic partners in client decision-making.
  • Improved client engagement and loyalty.
  • Better insights into business performance and forecasting.

Risks and Safeguards:

  • Outputs may reflect biased data or poor assumptions.
  • Professionals must validate and contextualise automated insights.
  • Information must be explained in client-accessible language.

A Mediterranean Lens: Gaps and Potential

While some Mediterranean firms are adopting these tools, many face significant barriers: language limitations in AI interfaces, low digital literacy among SMEs, and the absence of affordable, locally relevant platforms. At the same time, the region enjoys strong ethical traditions, close professional networks, and increasing alignment among national bodies.

To enable equitable adoption across the Mediterranean:

  • AI tools must support regional languages and accounting standards.
  • Institutes should provide accessible training and shared platforms.
  • Regional cooperation can foster joint innovation and resource pooling.

The Role of Legislators and Professional Bodies

As AI’s influence grows, legislators must strike a careful balance between enabling innovation and protecting the public interest. The EU AI Act offers a promising framework, but its national implementation must be adapted to local professional realities.

Professional bodies have a parallel duty to:

  • Publish clear, practical ethical guidelines on AI use.
  • Integrate AI governance into existing quality control systems.
  • Promote transparency and client education around AI involvement.
  • Encourage knowledge sharing and standard-setting within the profession.

Conclusion: Shaping the Transition Together

AI is no longer on the horizon — it is embedded in the daily practice of the accounting profession. For Mediterranean accountants, this is a moment of strategic responsibility. With pragmatic implementation, ethical safeguards, and regional solidarity, AI can become a trusted ally — not to replace human expertise, but to enhance it.

Now is the time to ensure that technology serves the profession’s values and reinforces its vital role in public accountability, client service, and economic stability.

Fédération des Experts Comptables Méditerranéens

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