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India with
its 1.43 billion people is now inarguably the most populous nation in the
world.[1]
Of these 68%[2] (or
about 970 million people) are in the working age of 15 to 64 years of age. The unemployment
rate stood at 6.6% in 2021-22. As many
as a whopping 42% of India’s graduates under 25 were unemployed in the same
period.[3]
Does the
advent of AI-encompassing technologies like Generative AI threaten to inflate
this number to catastrophic proportions? What does the future hold for India's
unemployed millions (35 million in both 2021 and 2022)?[4]
In a world of global uncertainties and changing power dynamics as well as
realigning global supply chains, the state of the Indian economy and by extension
its ability to provide gainful employment to millions of people of working age
is an area of pressing concern.
The rollout
of AI in India is in its initial stages but has nevertheless significantly
affected employment in some sectors on account of its ability to automate
several routine tasks. At the same time, it has created new opportunities in
AI-related job functions. According to CNBC outsourced coders based out of
India are slated to lose their jobs in about two years.[5]
That may sound worrisome, but on the other hand, a survey conducted by the
leading job site Indeed found that Indian companies and employers hold a
positive outlook on the impact of AI on jobs. As many as 85% of the Indian
companies who participated in the survey believed that AI would impact the job
scene positively in the short term (next 5 years).[6]
This is
borne out by the fact that the advent of AI has led to the creation of a whole
host of opportunities in engineering, data science and machine learning,
putting a huge premium on people possessing the required skill set. World
Economic Forum assumes that AI will create 12 million more jobs for people than
the ones it will displace. India is fortuitously placed to capitalize on it
because it is home to 416000 AI professionals (August 2023 figures) against a
demand of about 629000 such people. This figure is likely to hit 1 million by
2026 if one goes by a report by the Wheebox National Employability Test.[7]
Cause for anxiety
The promise
of availability of plentiful employment across the short-term horizon
notwithstanding there is genuine anxiety amongst employees and job seekers in
the country about the impact of AI on their future prospects. These pertain to
the need for them to reskill or upskill to stay relevant. Then there is the
ever-present gnawing fear of facing redundancy on account of the adoption of
AI.
For
instance, the launch of Chat GPT in November 2022 made a whole host of
professionals across the spectrum ranging from programmers and financial
advisors to accountants and legal assistants fear for their jobs. People would
naturally feel alarmed when leading financial institutions like Goldman Sachs
anticipate AI impacting if not altogether eliminating as many as 300 million
jobs.[8]
Conclusion
Viewed
objectively, the adoption of AI by businesses in India will require some
realignment regarding roles and the need for reskilling but will end up
creating way more opportunities than any marginal displacements. It opens up
huge opportunities for savvy entrepreneurs to leverage it to offer way better
products and offer far more efficient services. Doing so will create more
employment not just by way of AI professionals needing to be deployed, but also
by creating whole new categories of products and services, that one can't even conceive
of right now.
When
computers first arrived on the scene people thought that banks would stop
hiring people, but the sector realigned itself and expanded like never before,
giving rise to the fintech industry that is revolutionizing banking services in
ways not thought possible in the past. The future is bound to be good for the
youth of this country- Artificial Intelligence will ensure that it is so.
[1] https://www.worldometers.info/world-population/india-population/
[2] [2]
https://www.businesstoday.in/india-at-100/story/inclusive-india-2047-empowering-the-demographic-dividend-395359-2023-08-24
[3] https://indianexpress.com/article/business/42-3-of-graduates-under-25-unemployed-finds-latest-state-of-working-india-report-8949124/
[4] https://www.newindianexpress.com/web-only/2023/Jul/29/the-19-million-plus-question-has-finding-a-job-in-india-gotten-harder-or-easier-2599577.html
[5] https://www.businesstoday.in/technology/news/story/ai-will-take-away-jobs-of-outsourced-coders-in-india-in-next-2-years-stability-ai-ceo-390384-2023-07-19
[6] https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/jobs/mid-career/ai-to-have-positive-short-term-impact-on-jobs-finds-global-survey/articleshow/104471561.cms?from=mdr
[7] https://www.livemint.com/ai/artificial-intelligence/ai-in-india-jobs-evolved-not-erased-opportunity-and-reskilling-key-experts-claim-11703326684794.html
[8] https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/technology/ai-anxiety-workers-fret-over-uncertain-future/article67157022.ece
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