AI and the Future Employment in India

Syllabus: GS3/ Economy

Context

  • Recent surveys suggest that the rapid adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI) is reshaping India’s graduate employment landscape, posing new challenges for employability and workforce development.

How AI is Transforming the Job Market?

  • Shrinking Entry-Level Opportunities: AI tools are increasingly capable of performing routine tasks that were traditionally assigned to fresh graduates.
    • Activities such as data processing, basic coding, report preparation, market research, and presentation design are being automated.
    • A report by Randstad Digital found that over 30% of Indian organisations are planning to reduce graduate hiring as AI adoption expands.
  • Decline of the “Hire-and-Train” Model: Earlier, organisations recruited large numbers of graduates and provided extensive on-the-job training.
    • Employers now prefer candidates who can contribute immediately in AI-enabled workplaces.
  • Growing Anxiety Among Graduates: A large majority of graduates believe AI and automation may make job acquisition more difficult.
    • Professional certifications, internships, and practical learning experiences are increasingly being viewed as more valuable than traditional degrees alone.
  • Rising Importance of Continuous Upskilling: Rapid technological change is making lifelong learning a necessity rather than an option.
    • AI-related skills, data analytics, machine learning, and digital competencies are witnessing growing demand across industries.

How AI Affects Different Jobs?

  • High-Skilled Jobs Face Greater Exposure: Research suggests that highly skilled occupations currently face greater AI exposure than low-skilled jobs.
    • Professionals such as software developers, consultants, analysts, researchers, lawyers, and managers are increasingly seeing parts of their work automated.
    • Generative AI can perform many cognitive tasks that were previously considered difficult to automate.
  • Low-Skilled Jobs Remain Relatively Protected: Many low-skilled occupations involve physical labour, interpersonal interaction, and context-specific decision-making.
    • As a result, jobs such as construction work, caregiving, hospitality services, and agricultural labour face lower AI exposure than many routine white-collar occupations.

Implications for India

  • Demographic Dividend Under Pressure: AI-driven reduction in entry-level jobs could limit employment opportunities for India’s large youth population, affecting the realization of its demographic dividend.
  • Challenge to India’s Services-Led Growth Model: Sectors such as IT, BPO, consulting, and financial services, which traditionally absorbed large numbers of graduates, are increasingly automating routine tasks.
  • Rising Skill and Income Inequality: Workers with AI and digital skills are likely to benefit, while others may face job displacement and stagnant wages.
implications for india

Initiatives taken by India

  • National Education Policy (NEP) 2020: The policy emphasizes digital and AI literacy as core competencies across all levels of education.
  • Skill India Mission: Skill India Mission, led by the Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship (MSDE), is integrating AI and emerging technologies into its training ecosystem.
  • YUVAi (Youth for Unnati and Vikas with AI): The initiative, launched by MeitY and National e-Governance Division (NeGD), was designed to equip students from Classes 8 to 12 with artificial intelligence, technological, and social skills in an inclusive manner.
  • IndiaAI FutureSkills: The initiative launched under the IndiaAI Mission (2024), seeks to build a strong ecosystem of AI-skilled professionals through targeted interventions across multiple education levels from undergraduate to doctoral studies.

Way Ahead

  • Strengthen Education-Industry Linkages: Universities should align curricula with emerging industry needs and technological developments.
    • Industry partnerships should be expanded to provide practical exposure and workplace experience.
  • Promote Lifelong Learning: A national framework for continuous reskilling and upskilling should be developed.
  • Improve Labour Market Intelligence: India should develop detailed occupational databases and real-time labour market information systems, to track AI-driven changes in employment patterns.
  • Encourage Human-AI Complementarity: Policy efforts should focus on sectors where human creativity, judgment, empathy, and problem-solving complement AI technologies.

Concluding remarks

  • Artificial Intelligence is reshaping India’s employment landscape by reducing demand for routine entry-level jobs while increasing the value of advanced skills and adaptability. 
  • To ensure inclusive growth, India must strengthen education, skilling, and labour market institutions to prepare its workforce for an AI-driven economy.

Source: BW

 

Other News of the Day

Syllabus: GS2/ Governance/ Social Justice Context The latest Prison Statistics report released by the National Crime Records Bureau shows that the occupancy rate in Indian jails fell to a decade-low of 112.7% in 2024. However, overcrowding remains a persisting problem in Indian prisons driven largely by a high share of undertrials. Major Highlights Overcrowding in...
Read More

Syllabus: GS2/IR Context Defence Minister Rajnath Singh and his Australian counterpart co-chaired the second edition of the India-Australia Defence Ministers’ Dialogue in New Delhi. Major Highlights Both nations have agreed to advance collaborative maritime domain awareness activities using maritime patrol aircraft and to explore opportunities to enhance undersea domain awareness.  Two sides discussed efforts to...
Read More

Syllabus: GS2/ Governance, GS3/ Economy Context India has significantly expanded its quality ecosystem through standards, certification systems, and quality control orders, however the country still faces challenges in ensuring global credibility and trust in its ecosystem. India’s Quality Ecosystem India has over 22,300 standards, with around 94% harmonised with international ISO and IEC standards. India...
Read More

Syllabus: GS3/ Biotechnology In News Recent advances in genome sequencing, gene editing, artificial intelligence, and DNA synthesis have accelerated the growth of synthetic biology. About Synthetic Biology Synthetic Biology is the application of engineering principles to biology, where biological components are designed, assembled, and modified to perform specific functions. It involves engineering organisms to possess...
Read More

Majuli Island Syllabus: GS1/ Geography Context A recent study by scientists from the Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences has reconstructed nearly 4,000 years of climate, vegetation, and river dynamics of Majuli Island. About Majuli Island Majuli is located in the Brahmaputra River system in Assam and is recognized as the world’s largest inhabited river island....
Read More
scroll to top