Syllabus: GS3/Artificial Intelligence
Context
- At the India AI Impact Summit 2026, a high-level discussion on “The Future of Employability in the Age of AI” brought together policymakers, industry leaders, educators and innovators.
About
- The discussion examined which skills, roles, and mindsets will remain relevant as automation accelerates and what individuals must do to stay employable.
- Speakers emphasised the growing importance of creativity, systems thinking, adaptability, and lifelong learning over narrow task-based expertise.
- The Chief Economic Advisor underlined that aligning technological adoption with mass employability must be a clear national commitment.
- This effort must extend beyond government to become a Team India initiative involving policymakers, industry, educators, and society at large.
- The deliberations underscored that while AI presents significant disruption, it also offers India an opportunity to build an inclusive, innovation-driven and responsible AI ecosystem aligned with national priorities and citizen welfare.
India–AI Impact Summit 2026
- Hosted by: Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY).
- The India–AI Impact Summit 2026, was announced by the PM at the France AI Action Summit and it will be the first-ever global AI summit hosted in the Global South.
- It will strengthen existing multilateral initiatives while advancing new priorities, deliverables, and cooperative frameworks.
- The Three Sutras: Three foundational pillars, known as ‘Sutras’ i.e. People, Planet and Progress, define how AI can be harnessed through multilateral cooperation for collective benefit.

Impact of AI on Jobs in India
- Routine, repetitive tasks are most vulnerable: Roles in sectors like BPO/ customer service, basic clerical work, assembly-line tasks, and routine logistics can be significantly reduced as AI-driven automation takes over these functions.
- Traditional mid-skill jobs, which have historically provided stable employment, are being squeezed as automation substitutes many of those functions.
- IT and outsourcing: AI tools are increasingly handling tasks such as coding, testing, and support work contributing to workforce restructuring in major IT firms and outsourcing companies.
Emerging Opportunities
- Emerging technologies are creating new job categories that didn’t exist before such as: AI/ML engineers, Data scientists and analysts, Cloud architects, Cybersecurity specialists, AI product managers and prompt engineers.
- These roles often command higher salaries and are rapidly growing in demand.
- Forecasts suggest millions of new tech jobs could be added over the next few years, with estimates of ~4.7 million AI/tech roles emerging in India by 2027.
- Shift in Skill demands: About 38% of the Indian workforce could experience shifts in skill needs due to AI by 2030 the highest among BRICS countries.
- Traditional academic credentials are becoming less predictive of employability; recruiters are prioritizing technology skills, analytical abilities, and adaptive learning.
Way Ahead
- Upskilling & Reskilling Imperatives: India needs large-scale reskilling to adapt to new job requirements, estimates suggest over 16 million workers will need reskilling in AI and automation technologies by 2027.
- Government & Industry Initiatives: National strategies and partnerships are focusing on equipping students and workers with AI and tech competencies.
- Large-scale corporate skill-building initiatives are underway to boost workforce readiness.
Conclusion
- While certain traditional roles will decline or transform, a dynamic landscape of new opportunities is opening up that rewards advanced technical capabilities, continuous learning, and adaptability.
- The transition will require coordinated efforts from government, industry, and educational systems to ensure India’s workforce is ready for the future of work.
Government Initiatives
- FutureSkills PRIME (National Reskilling & Upskilling Platform): A flagship national programme by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) in partnership with NASSCOM to upskill/reskill IT professionals and youth in 10 new and emerging technologies including AI.
- Skill India Mission: India’s broader Skill India Mission now includes several AI/tech components.
- It encourages early exposure to AI skills and ties vocational pathways with employability in future tech roles.
- National Council for Vocational Education & Training (NCVET) has developed the National Programme on Artificial Intelligence (NPAI) Skilling Framework, which outlines the national roadmap, structure and guidelines for skilling in AI, data science and emerging technologies.
- MSDE launched a national-level initiative, SOAR (Skilling for AI Readiness) aimed at embedding AI awareness and foundational skills among school students (Classes 6–12) and building AI literacy among educators.
- Directorate General of Training (DGT) has collaborated with entities including IBM India, Microsoft, Cisco, Adobe India, Amazon Web Services (AWS), etc, for skilling initiatives under Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR).
- Sector Skill Councils (SSCs), constituted with active industry and global domain participation, co-develop curriculum and conduct Training of Trainers.
- Leading industry partners offer curriculum support and provide apprenticeship/internship support in AI, robotics and climate tech.
Source: PIB