Sun, 17 May 2026
Technology News Updated May 17, 2026 · 20:06

AI Should Complement, Not Replace Humans: Arvind Virmani on India’s AI Strategy

Former NITI Aayog member Arvind Virmani argues that India should use AI to complement its large workforce rather than replace it with robotics. He emphasizes AI's role in improving productivity across healthcare, education, agriculture, and small businesses. Virmani calls for integrating AI education from secondary school and providing tax incentives for private R&D. He notes that while global AI investment may be in a bubble, India's opportunity lies in building practical, productivity-enhancing applications.

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"AI should complement humans, not replace them": Former NITI Aaayog member Arvind Virmani on India's AI strategy

New Delhi, May 17

India should use Artificial Intelligence to enhance human productivity rather than replace workers, said Former NITI Aayog member Arvind Virmani on Sunday. He argued that the country's strength lies in combining AI with its large workforce instead of aggressively pursuing robotics-led automation.

In an interview with ANI, Virmani said India's AI strategy should focus on practical applications and productivity improvements across sectors such as healthcare, education, agriculture and small businesses.

"For us, AI has to be a complement... it has to be to help improve the quality of the profession," Virmani said.

He said countries such as China and many developed economies are increasingly focusing on robotics because of shrinking labour forces, but India's demographic situation is very different.

"China, for example, will not have any people to work, so they are emphasising robots; we should not emphasise robots," he said.

According to Virmani, India should instead focus on improving worker productivity and skill development through AI tools.

"When I hear why isn't India building robots, I say that's not what you want to do, you want to use the people, you want to give job skills to the people," he said.

Virmani also stressed the importance of integrating AI education into the school system from an early stage.

"If AI is going to become pervasive, we must teach our students at every level... starting from secondary school, they must be able to use AI," he said.

He said AI can also play a major role in supporting self-employed workers and small businesses, particularly women-led enterprises and family-run operations.

Virmani cited examples where AI systems could help manage small enterprises, improve food processing efficiency and support rural productivity.

On concerns around a possible AI investment bubble, Virmani said rising global uncertainty and tariff-related risks have made traditional investments more risky, leading investors to shift more capital towards AI.

"In that sense, there is a bubble, but this bubble will come down as soon as the risk of these other things comes back to more normal levels," he said.

Virmani also argued that India's AI investment story is often misunderstood, saying the government is already supporting AI research and development through funding initiatives and technology programmes.

"The government is spending a lot of money on AI," he said, adding that support is being extended to universities, startups and companies developing large language models (LLMs).

He said companies, including Sarvam AI and three other firms, have received government backing to develop foundational AI models in India.

Virmani also called for stronger incentives to boost private-sector research and development in emerging technologies such as AI, semiconductors and quantum computing.

"We should restore the double deduction on R&D expenditure," he said, while suggesting that tax incentives should be targeted towards strategic sectors critical for future growth.

According to Virmani, India's biggest AI opportunity lies in building real-world applications that improve productivity and service delivery across sectors, rather than merely replicating the strategies of developed economies.

— ANI

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Sarah B
Smart approach. As someone working in tech, I see how AI can amplify human capability rather than eliminate jobs. The emphasis on education from secondary school level is crucial - we need to prepare the next generation for an AI-augmented workforce.
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Vikram M
Good points but I disagree slightly. We can't completely ignore robotics. Manufacturing sector in India needs automation too! Maybe a balanced approach: use AI for services sector productivity and some robotics for manufacturing where labor is scarce or dangerous work.
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Rohit P
Virmani ji is absolutely right about small businesses and women-led enterprises! My mother runs a small textile business and AI tools have helped her manage inventory and customer orders so much better. She didn't lose her job - she got better at it. That's the real Indian story 🇮🇳
M
Michael C
The R&D tax incentive suggestion is spot on. We need to create an ecosystem where Indian companies can develop their own AI solutions rather than just importing foreign models. But the government also needs to ensure proper data privacy laws before scaling AI adoption.
P
Priya S
Love the focus on agriculture and rural productivity! 🌾 Farmers in my village could really benefit from AI tools for weather prediction, pest control and market prices. But we need to ensure these tools are available in local languages and don't require expensive smartphones. Digital divide is real.
J

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