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𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗥𝗲𝗽𝗼𝗿𝘁𝗲𝗱 𝗗𝗲𝗮𝘁𝗵 𝗼𝗳 𝗝𝗼𝗯𝘀 𝗯𝘆 𝗔𝗜 𝗜𝘀 𝗮𝗻 𝗘𝘅𝗮𝗴𝗴𝗲𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻

  • Writer: Benjamin
    Benjamin
  • 7 days ago
  • 5 min read

Updated: 3 days ago

The Reported Death of Jobs by AI Is an Exaggeration

 

In 1897, a very much alive Mark Twain quipped to a reporter, “The report of my death was an exaggeration.”*

 

An accountant could have repeated the same line at almost every big technology shift since Twain’s era. Each time a new technology arrived promising to wipe out “number‑crunching” work, experts rushed to declare the profession finished. Each time, accounting efficiently shed some routine tasks, added more valuable strategic responsibilities, and became more important than before.

 

From calculators to cloud software, the pattern is the same: technology automates low‑value tasks, headlines predict extinction, and accountants move upstream into judgment, interpretation, and advice.

 

In each period below, the experts were confident until proven wrong.

 

 

Mechanical and Electronic Calculators (Late 1800s–Mid 1900s)

 

Mechanical and later electronic calculators were the breakthrough technology, promising fast, error‑free arithmetic that would eliminate the drudgery of hand‑written columns and mental math in ledgers. Commentators warned that for simple bookkeeping and totaling up long columns of numbers, which had once been a full‑time job, a machine could now do the work in seconds.

 

In reality, calculators stripped out low‑value arithmetic while accounting expanded into financial analysis, internal controls, and advisory work, so the profession evolved.

 

 

Mainframe and Batch Accounting Systems (1960s–1970s)

 

Mainframe computers and batch processing systems allowed large organizations to run payroll, post to the general ledger, and produce periodic reports through centralized data centers instead of roomfuls of clerks. Experts predicted that once books and records were converted to computers, many traditional accounting and audit tasks tied to paper trails would become obsolete.

 

In practice, accountants shifted toward designing and testing IT controls, interpreting computer‑generated reports, and assuring data integrity, which preserved and often elevated the profession’s role.

 

 

PCs and Spreadsheets (1980s–1990s)

 

The rise of personal computers and spreadsheets such as Lotus 1‑2‑3 and later Excel enabled one professional to handle modeling, consolidation, and forecasting that previously required teams of clerks. Articles at the time predicted that computers would reduce the need for accountants, arguing that computer‑based ledgers and automated calculations would sharply cut demand for accounting clerks.

 

As spreadsheets toppled older manual methods and automated what had been full‑time positions, accounting work migrated toward scenario analysis, business partnering, and more sophisticated financial planning, with spreadsheets becoming a core professional tool rather than a replacement for accountants themselves.

 

 

Accounting Software (1990s–2000s)

 

Off‑the‑shelf accounting software and enterprise resource planning systems (ERPs) were the next major wave, giving even small and mid‑sized businesses integrated tools for bookkeeping, invoicing, and basic reporting without large accounting departments. Commentators warned that as systems like QuickBooks, Xero, and NetSuite automated monthly books and records, we would see large reductions in traditional bookkeeping.

 

What happened instead is that accountants increasingly focused on implementing these systems, advising on processes and controls, and delivering higher‑value services such as tax planning, performance measurement, and strategic guidance.

 

 

Cloud Accounting and Automation (2010s)

 

Cloud accounting platforms, along with live bank feeds, optical character recognition, and robotic process automation, automated data entry, coding, and reconciliations in near real time. Once again, many observers argued that if software could ingest, categorize, and reconcile transactions automatically, some accounting jobs would disappear altogether.

 

Once again, the work shifted: firms reduced the volume of routine transactional tasks per person, and accountants increasingly provided client advisory services, data analytics, and real‑time performance monitoring rather than being displaced.

 

 

Artificial Intelligence (Late 2010s–present)

 

Machine learning, AI, and most recently generative AI can already automate parts of audit testing, tax preparation, document review, and narrative analysis. Reports now predict that accounting, bookkeeping, and payroll clerks will be among the fastest‑declining jobs in the coming years as AI advances.

 

Yet the emerging pattern looks familiar: AI tools are best at standardizing messy data, surfacing anomalies, and drafting first‑pass analyses, while humans remain responsible for judgment, ethics, and context. New roles are growing at the intersection of domain expertise and AI‑driven tools.

 

 

What This Cycle Keeps Getting Wrong


What each wave of doomsday predictions misses is that “accounting and finance” is not a fixed bundle of tasks. It is a moving frontier between raw data and real-world decisions. When technology automates one area, the profession steps into the next.

 

AI will almost certainly compress roles built purely on repetition and compliance checklists. But it will also create more room for professionals who can interpret models, challenge assumptions, and translate machine-generated insight into human-scale decisions.

 

In a recent post, I wrote about how Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) were “obviously” predicted to replace bank tellers, yet 50 years later, we still have more tellers. People and work evolve alongside technology.

 

The real story is not the “exaggerated death” of accounting and finance jobs, but the steady upgrading of what it means to be an accounting and finance professional and, increasingly, in many other careers.


 

* In 1897, the New York Journal reported that Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) was dead. The rumor was sparked by a mix-up involving his cousin, who was seriously ill but recovered. When a reporter contacted him about his health, Twain quipped that he was not dead.

 

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This format, called Go Wide: A Life Less Curated, serves as an antidote to algorithms and echo chambers by revealing how major historical events impacted the world and might shape what comes next.

 

Do you agree with this prediction? Are there other topics we should explore? Let us know at info@webuildscalegrow.com.


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"The Reported Death of Jobs by AI Is an Exaggeration" image by skarletmotion



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