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Updated May 30, 2026 · 11:06
Computer News Updated May 30, 2026

AI Reshapes India’s Workforce, But Human Oversight Crucial: ACCA

India's workforce is rapidly adopting AI, with 52% confident in its use for unbiased hiring, outpacing global peers. However, experts warn that human ownership is essential to avoid repeating biases from historical data. The ACCA report shows 57% of Indian respondents already use AI at work, while 53% of finance professionals feel overwhelmed by technological change. Employers stress that AI should augment, not replace, human judgment in recruitment and role redesign.

AI to reshape hiring and work in India, but 'human ownership' key as confidence outpaces global peers: ACCA

New Delhi, May 30

India's workforce is rapidly embracing AI at work and in hiring, with adoption expected to accelerate as organizations redesign roles around automation, ACCA said in its latest survey.

The report noted that India currently enjoys global confidence in AI-led recruitment and upskilling, though experts warn that "human ownership and intervention" will remain critical to avoid repeating past biases.

"AI is an algorithm and algorithmic does not automatically mean objective or fair," explained Sowmya Narayan, quoted by ACCA in the report. "Given the use of historical data for pattern recognition, the application of AI for recruitment would mean repeating the mistakes of the past. Context blindness is another risk - explaining career decisions like career breaks, changes, and growth come with subjectivity and personal stories - something that agentic AI can't be expected to be mindful about," Narayan said.

According to ACCA's survey, over half of India respondents, 52%, said they are confident using an AI algorithm to support fair and unbiased recruitment, higher than the global average of 43%. Confidence is strongest among Gen Z at 54%, compared with 48% for Gen Y and 27% for Gen X. Across seniority levels too, confidence levels around AI-based hiring in India outpace global figures.

Use at work is already widespread. When asked about AI use at work, 57% of India respondents confirmed using AI technologies in their current role. That exposure translates to skills confidence: 86% said they are confident in their ability to learn and apply AI-related skills. Organizational support is catching up, with 50% confirming their employer is providing opportunities to learn AI-related skills in 2026, up from 37% in 2025, ACCA reported.

Yet anxieties persist. Jobs being replaced by technology is the number one concern for India respondents. More than half of finance professionals, 53%, feel overwhelmed by the pace of technological change and 57% are concerned about AI's impact on their role, both significantly above global averages. One third, 34%, feel investment in AI is outpacing investment in people, versus 26% globally.

Employers at an ACCA India roundtable said AI is proving a strong recruitment funnel to sift large applicant pools, but cautioned against over-reliance. "While using AI for screening resumes, we've lost out on some good resumes that maybe a person looking at it would have passed on to the next stage. In its current capability, we can't rely on AI without human involvement," a human resource professional told ACCA. Another finance leader said they are using Power BI, Power Automate, ChatGPT to bring efficiency, though hallucination and data privacy keep organizations on guard.

The report by ACCA suggested that the integration of AI will fundamentally reshape the nature of work, with generative and agentic AI handling operational tasks. "It is essential for employees to stay aspirational and prepared - by upskilling and learning how to embed AI into their roles to stay relevant. At the same time, employers must redesign roles in a way that routine work is automated, enabling people to focus on more meaningful, high-value contributions," Narayan noted in comments shared by ACCA.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Sneha F

I use ChatGPT and Power BI in my finance role daily, and yes, it saves time on data entry. But the anxiety about job replacement is real - 57% concerned is huge. My concern is that companies will use AI to justify layoffs under the guise of "efficiency." Need strong regulations. 🇮🇳

Rohit L

Gen Z here (54% confidence) - we grew up with tech, so AI doesn't scare us. But the "context blindness" point is spot on. When I took a career break for family reasons, a human recruiter understood my story. Would an AI reject me automatically? That's scary. Human judgment matters. 🤔

Michael C

Interesting how India's confidence outpaces global peers - perhaps because we're more comfortable with tech in daily life (UPI, Aadhaar)? But 34% feeling investment in AI outpaces investment in people is alarming. Companies should upskill employees, not just automate. The human ownership key is crucial.

Kavya N

As an HR professional, I've seen AI screens reject candidates with unconventional backgrounds - those who switched industries or had gaps. The report's example of losing good resumes is real. AI is a tool, not a replacement. We need "human-in-the-loop" models for hiring in India. 👍

Jessica F

The stat about 86% confident in learning AI skills is impressive for India - shows our adaptability. But the "overwhelmed by pace of change" (53%) is a warning. We need continuous learning support, not just from employers but from government initiatives. Also, data privacy concerns with ChatGPT are valid

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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