Government Policy is Rewriting Finance Operations

Daniel Shem-Tov
By Daniel Shem-Tov updated June 3, 2026
Daniel Shem-Tov

Daniel Shem-Tov

EMEA Director of Finance

Daniel Shem-Tov is a seasoned finance executive with over a decade of experience spanning corporate finance, strategic operations, and international financial leadership. As the EMEA Director of Finance at Tipalti, a global fintech company, Daniel has built and led finance teams across Israel, the UK, and the Netherlands, overseeing everything from audits and treasury management to complex compliance and cross-border financial operations. He plays a pivotal role in shaping company policy and performance, working closely with senior leadership, including the CEO, CFO, board, and investors. Prior to Tipalti, Daniel served as Financial Controller at SundaySky, where he managed all aspects of finance, budgeting, and reporting. He began his career at KPMG Israel, quickly rising to lead audit teams for major clients in the technology and banking sectors. Known for his analytical rigor and strategic thinking, Daniel has deep expertise in scaling financial infrastructures, navigating regulatory environments, and building high-performing teams. He holds a B.A. in Accounting and Business Administration from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and is a Certified Public Accountant in Israel. Daniel brings a global mindset, a hands-on leadership style, and a passion for operational excellence to every organization he supports.

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Today, government policy is actively reshaping the mechanics of how finance organizations operate day-to-day. Across the US, Europe, and Asia, regulators are moving away from retrospective oversight and toward real-time enforcement embedded directly into financial systems.

The result is a dramatic shift in the role of finance.

Accounts payable teams are now managing geopolitical risk. CFOs are becoming responsible for supply-chain ethics enforcement. AI governance is entering audit discussions. And government agencies are increasingly sitting inside the transaction flow itself.

In many ways, this is the beginning of a new operating environment for finance teams: one where policy is no longer something you respond to quarterly—it’s something that directly determines whether money can move at all.

Key Takeaways

  • Compliance has shifted from retrospective audits to instant “clearance models,” where governments must digitally validate invoices before payments can legally proceed.
  • Rapidly shifting trade policies, sanctions, and tariffs have forced finance teams to continuously screen global suppliers and track real-time “landed costs” to protect margins.
  • Finance software is transitioning from simple record-keeping to “compliance-first” automation that uses AI to enforce shifting global policies before transactions even occur.

Governments Are Moving Into the Transaction Layer

The clearest example of this transformation is happening in tax policy.

Historically, governments relied on post-audit systems. Companies filed VAT, or GST, reports monthly or quarterly, and regulators reviewed them later. Compliance was largely retrospective. Now, governments are redesigning tax enforcement around “clearance models,” where invoices must be validated instantly before they become legally recognized.

Countries including France, Poland, Belgium, and Italy are accelerating mandatory e-invoicing initiatives that require structured invoice data to pass through government-connected platforms. That may sound technical, but operationally, it changes everything.

For finance teams, an invoice is no longer simply a document between buyer and supplier; it’s becoming a regulated digital asset that must meet specific government formatting and validation standards before payment can proceed.

A comparison chart showing differences between the Audit Era and the Clearance Era in government financial oversight, highlighting changes in compliance and reporting processes.

This is one reason finance technology discussions have shifted so dramatically over the last two years. The issue is no longer simply efficiency. It is resilience. If finance systems cannot respond to policy changes in real time, operations inevitably stall.

Trade Policy Has Become a Finance Operations Problem

At the same time, trade policy volatility is forcing finance teams into a much more strategic role.

Tariffs, sanctions, export controls, and import restrictions are now changing faster than traditional quarterly planning cycles can handle. What used to be a procurement or legal issue is now directly affecting:

  • Cash flow forecasting
  • Supplier onboarding
  • Landed cost analysis
  • Supply-chain continuity
  • Working capital management

The resurgence of industrial policy globally (from US semiconductor restrictions to European supply-chain regulations and shifting China trade dynamics) has created a level of uncertainty many finance teams have never experienced before. According to the World Economic Forum, geopolitical fragmentation and trade restrictions are now among the top risks impacting global business operations.

Finance leaders are increasingly expected to answer questions that would have sounded unusual five years ago:

  • What happens to margins if tariffs shift next month?
  • Which suppliers create sanctions exposure?
  • How quickly can sourcing move if trade restrictions change?
  • Which suppliers create ESG risk?

This is one reason “landed cost visibility” has become such an important finance capability. Modern finance teams can no longer rely on static assumptions. They need up-to-the-minute visibility into the true cost of paying suppliers globally—including tax exposure, logistics volatility, and regulatory fees.

The US Is Raising the Bar on Enforcement Expectations

While Europe is driving the e-invoicing transformation, US regulators are increasing pressure in other areas—particularly financial crime, sanctions enforcement, and AI governance.

One of the most important changes is the shift from policy documentation to proof of enforcement. Regulators expect organizations not only to have compliance procedures but to demonstrate that controls are actively functioning. This is particularly relevant for:

  • Supplier screening
  • AML controls
  • Fraud detection
  • Payments monitoring

At the same time, sanctions enforcement has become dramatically more dynamic. US Treasury sanctions lists and OFAC requirements can change overnight, creating immediate operational exposure for finance teams managing global suppliers and cross-border payments.

This is directly changing how finance teams operate.

Historically, supplier screening often happened during onboarding. Today, leading finance organizations are continuously re-screening suppliers and payees before payments are deployed. Why? Because in the current enforcement environment, a supplier added to a sanctions list on Tuesday can become a regulatory issue by Wednesday.

AI Governance Is Quietly Becoming a Finance Policy Issue

Another emerging policy trend finance leaders are watching closely is AI regulation.

Governments globally are beginning to introduce frameworks around algorithmic transparency, data governance, and AI accountability. Europe’s AI Act is one of the clearest examples of this direction. For finance teams, the implications are significant. AI is rapidly being used for:

  • Spend analysis
  • Fraud detection
  • Supplier risk monitoring
  • Forecasting
  • Approval automation

But regulators are beginning to ask difficult questions:

  • How are financial decisions being made with AI?
  • Can organizations explain AI-generated outcomes?
  • What data is the AI being trained on?
  • Are there governance controls around AI models?

This is creating a new tension inside finance organizations. Teams want the speed and efficiency of AI, but governments want transparency, auditability, and explainability.

Finance Teams Are Becoming the Front Line of Policy Enforcement

Finance teams are no longer just responding to regulation—they are now the operational layer through which it is enforced.

Government policy is increasingly embedded directly into how money moves, with requirements built into payment rails, AP systems, and digital infrastructure. As a result, finance platforms are shifting from transaction processors to regulatory control systems that determine whether payments can happen at all.

This is why fragmented workflows, spreadsheets, and disconnected supplier systems are becoming unsustainable. The pace of global policy change across tax, sanctions, AI governance, and trade has outgrown manual finance operations.

The response is a shift toward “Compliance-First” finance workflows, built on centralized platforms that unify payments and supplier oversight through three critical functions:

1. Automatically Enforcing Government Reporting Requirements

Modern finance systems now need to interact directly with government tax and e-invoicing frameworks. That means supporting:

  • Automated VAT validation
  • Digital tax form collection
  • Structured invoice transmission
  • Real-time approval workflows
  • Continuous audit trails

In practice, your AP platform becomes a regulatory layer. This is especially important as countries accelerate clearance-model mandates that require invoices to be validated before payment can proceed.

2. Tracking the Cost of Global Operations

At the same time, geopolitical volatility is changing how finance teams evaluate profitability and risk. In today’s environment, margins are consistently shaped by hidden operational variables:

  • Tariffs
  • Cross-border tax exposure
  • FX fluctuations
  • Supplier disruption risk

As a result, finance teams are being labeled as those that operate with advanced AI-enabled finance systems and those that don’t.

A comparison table showing the differences between legacy workflows and advanced AI-enabled finance systems for global spend visibility.

3. Monitoring Suppliers Dynamically

The final shift is happening around supplier risk. Static supplier monitoring is not sufficient protection against sanctions exposure, fraud, or supply-chain failures. Always-on supplier monitoring is quickly becoming a core part of your financial infrastructure. Technology-forward supplier ecosystems rely on:

  • Automated sanctions screening
  • Dynamic watchlist monitoring
  • AI-driven anomaly detection
  • Agile payment controls

The objective is not merely efficiency; it’s building a secure control layer around company cash flow. In a “Compliance-First” global economy, a single payment error can trigger increased regulatory scrutiny and violations.

Finance as an Extension of Government Policy

What defines this moment is not simply the speed of regulatory change, but the way that change is being operationalized.

Government policy is no longer external to finance systems. It’s being executed inside them—built directly into tax validation, supplier onboarding, payment rails, sanctions screening, and increasingly, AI-driven workflows.

As a result, finance technology has shifted from a record-keeping layer to an enforcement layer. Your automated systems must evaluate, apply, and enforce policy changes before a transaction even occurs.

Those who recognize this shift (and build their operations to support it) will be best positioned to adapt. In a “Compliance-First” era, finance teams are no longer working alongside government regulation. They are operating directly within it.

Are Finance Teams Equipped for Today’s Economy?


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