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Financial Accounting Transformation in the Digital Era: Challenges and Opportunities for the Accounting Profession Ummu Kalsum; Tenriwaru Tenriwaru; Edy Susanto
Jurnal Akuntansi, Keuangan, dan Manajemen Vol 7 No 3 (2026): Juni
Publisher : Penerbit Goodwood

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.35912/jakman.v7i3.6335

Abstract

Purpose: This study examines how digital transformation reshapes financial accounting practices and influences the role of the accounting profession in implementing Standar Akuntansi Keuangan (SAK) in the digital era. Research Methodology: This study employs an exploratory qualitative approach using semi-structured interviews with eight informants, consisting of accounting educators and external auditors in Makassar, Indonesia. Participants were selected through purposive sampling based on their experience with digital accounting systems. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis to identify patterns related to role changes, challenges, and opportunities in SAK implementation. Results: The findings indicate that digital transformation does not change the substantive principles of SAK but significantly alters the mechanisms through which these standards are implemented. Financial reporting processes are increasingly integrated within digital accounting systems that automate transaction recording and enable real-time financial reporting. Consequently, the role of accountants has shifted from traditional administrative record keepers to more analytical and strategic professionals responsible for evaluating accounting systems and ensuring compliance with accounting standards. Conclusions: Digital transformation reflects an institutional adaptation process in which technological change reshapes accounting practices without replacing existing regulatory frameworks. Limitations: This study is limited by its small sample size and regional focus. Contributions: This study contributes to the literature by integrating institutional theory with digital accounting transformation and explaining how regulatory, normative, and cognitive factors influence SAK implementation.
Auditing Climate-Related Risk: Challenges to Auditor Independence and Professional Skepticism Edy Susanto; Tenriwaru Tenriwaru; Ummu Kalsum
Jurnal Akuntansi, Keuangan, dan Manajemen Vol 7 No 3 (2026): Juni
Publisher : Penerbit Goodwood

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.35912/jakman.v7i3.6350

Abstract

Purpose: This study examines how climate-related risk is identified and assessed in financial statement audits and analyzes its implications for auditor independence and professional skepticism within a risk-based auditing framework in regional Public Accounting Firms in Indonesia. Methodology: This qualitative exploratory study was conducted through semi-structured interviews with four auditors from regional Public Accounting Firms in Makassar, Indonesia, each with a minimum of three years of audit experience. Document analyses of International Standard on Auditing (ISA) 200, ISA 315, and ISA 540 complemented the interviews. Thematic analysis was employed to identify recurring patterns in risk assessment, professional judgements, and responses to climate-related uncertainty. Results: The findings reveal three dominant themes: (1) climate-related risk is primarily incorporated into the entity-level risk assessment stage; (2) its classification as a material misstatement risk remains inconsistent; and (3) climate-related accounting estimates significantly increase reliance on management assumptions, thereby intensifying challenges to auditor independence and professional skepticism. The integration of climate risk remains largely principle-based and dependent on judgment rather than on structured technical guidance. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that climate-related risk reshapes inherent risk assessment and expands the behavioral dimensions of auditing practice in regional contexts. The findings highlight the need for more operational guidance to support the consistent integration of climate considerations within risk-based auditing. Limitations: This study is limited to a small sample of regional auditors and relies on qualitative perceptions. Contributions: This research contributes to auditing literature by empirically illustrating how climate-related risk affects professional judgment, independence, and skepticism in emerging regional audit environments.