Archive/Sustainability, Professional Challenges, Ethics, and AI Orientation in the Accounting Profession: A CB-SEM Analysis of Technological Disconnection in Peru
Sustainability, Professional Challenges, Ethics, and AI Orientation in the Accounting Profession: A CB-SEM Analysis of Technological Disconnection in Peru
Raúl Caballero-Montañez, Luz Rosario-Polo, Ana Ordóñez-Ferro et al.
7 juillet 2026
en

Abstract

Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming the accounting function, but evidence from emerging economies still leaves a central question unresolved: whether the profession’s traditional strengths are sufficient to support this technological transition. This study examines this issue in Peru, where digital reform has advanced rapidly, but professional adaptation remains uneven. Using survey data from 424 accounting professionals and academics, a Covariance-Based Structural Equation Modeling (CB-SEM) approach was employed to test the relationships between Sustainability, Professional Challenges, IFAC Ethics, and AI Orientation. The construct previously described as AI adaptation is now defined more cautiously as AI Orientation, because its indicators capture a broad perceptual orientation toward AI, including perceived challenge, workflow impact, curricular integration, substitution concerns, and routine use, rather than verified adoption behavior. The results confirmed the strength of the traditional professional sequence: Sustainability significantly predicted Professional Challenges (β = 0.637; p < 0.001), and Professional Challenges strongly predicted adherence to IFAC Ethics (β = 0.972; p < 0.001). However, the direct path from Sustainability to IFAC Ethics was not significant (β = 0.200; p = 0.096). Regarding technological integration, the model revealed a structural disconnect. While Sustainability showed a weak direct effect on AI Orientation (β = 0.279; p = 0.045), neither Professional Challenges (β = 0.160; p = 0.510) nor IFAC Ethics (β = 0.037; p = 0.810) significantly predicted AI Orientation. These findings indicate that while the ethical and adaptive core of the Peruvian accounting profession remains highly resilient under pressure, its connection to AI is still fragmented, with algorithmic tools often perceived as external technological systems rather than integrated accounting competencies.

IPC Classification

G06

Keywords

sustainabilityprofessionalchallengesethicsorientationaccountingprofessioncb-semanalysistechnologicaldisconnectionperuauditingartificialintelligencetransformingfunctionevidenceemergingeconomiesstillleavescentralquestion
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