In This Critical Part of Audits, the Accountant’s Role Is Shrinking Fast

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Why it matters

Based on the search results provided, I cannot find specific information about KPMG piloting the removal of humans from routine testing of payroll and expenses using AI agents as described in your headline dated April 10, 2026. The search results do not contain reporting on this particular pilot program or development.

However, the search results do reveal relevant context about KPMG and AI in auditing:

Recent KPMG AI Cheating Incidents: In February 2026, KPMG Australia discovered that 28 staff members, including a senior partner, used AI tools to cheat on internal training exams about ethical AI use.[3][5] The partner was fined A$10,000 for uploading training materials into an AI tool to generate exam answers.[3] This incident was self-reported to Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand, triggering an independent investigation.[5] Notably, KPMG's own AI detection systems identified the violations.[3]

Broader Industry Shift: The audit profession is undergoing significant transformation as automation and AI replace routine tasks. Staff auditors are increasingly responsible for interpreting software outputs and analyzing complex exceptions rather than performing manual data entry and cross-checking—work that automation now handles.[2] However, audit firms still require human professionals for judgment, skepticism, and ethical decision-making that technology cannot replace.[2]

Prior Compliance Issues: This follows KPMG's 2021 scandal when over 1,100 partners and staff (12% of the workforce) were caught sharing answers on internal training tests between 2016-2020, resulting in a $615,000 fine from the US audit regulator.[1]

To verify the specific headline claim about payroll and expense testing pilots, you may need to search for more recent reporting directly from April 2026.

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