India accounting leaders say AI won’t kill offshore talent

PENSACOLA, FLORIDA — Not a single India-based leader at major United States accounting firms believes AI will eliminate the offshore accounting model — and hiring data backs that position, Going Concern reports.
Citrin Cooperman, which generated $985 million in revenue in 2025, has tripled its India hiring as it moves higher-complexity work — including client communication and end-to-end engagement completion — to its Indian teams.
AI shrinks team sizes; offshore demand keeps growing
The structural shift AI is producing is not headcount elimination but team compression: tasks that previously required five people may require two or three within three years as AI handles the mechanical work.
The work itself is upgrading simultaneously — from routine data processing toward reviewing, judgment-dependent tasks, and direct client interaction that earlier India-centric delivery models rarely touched.
Accounting firms expanding India operations are doing so not despite AI’s automation of routine tasks, but because of it — automation of low-value work creates capacity for Indian teams to be redeployed on higher-margin engagements.
“If everything gets done by AI, then not only India, but even the U.S. firms would be wiped out,” the report said.
Offshore and onshore accounting teams converging in capability
K-1 data entry — historically an hours-long seasonal workload that was a prototypical India offshore assignment — now takes minutes with AI assistance, a task-level transformation that compresses time-on-task without eliminating the professional need to verify, review, and act on the output.
The convergence of offshore and onshore work profiles is accelerating, with India-based teams increasingly handling client-facing work and end-to-end engagements previously concentrated in domestic U.S. offices.
Firm leaders from Armanino, PKF O’Connor Davies, and Citrin Cooperman each describe the same trajectory: Indian teams moving from supporting roles to full delivery units with client-facing responsibilities and end-to-end ownership.
The near-term direction, according to multiple India-based managing directors, is a model where onshore and offshore teams become indistinguishable in capability — converging in how AI-era work is distributed rather than diverging further on cost alone.
For accounting firms evaluating India offshore operations, the message is clear: AI is not a reason to pause investment — it is the reason the work being sent to India is worth more than it was three years ago.
The cost advantage has not disappeared; it has been joined by a capability upgrade that expanding firms are already monetizing. The competitive risk is not AI obsolescence — it is falling behind firms that have already rebuilt their India offshore mix around higher-value engagements.

Independent




