AI to Transform Lives, Create New Jobs, Not Cause Unemployment: Amitabh Kant

Amitabh Kant asserts that artificial intelligence will fundamentally transform daily life and economic growth, not lead to widespread job losses. He emphasizes that AI will instead generate new and higher-quality employment opportunities, such as roles for data scientists. Kant highlights India's unique advantages in the AI race, including its young demographic, vast talent pool, and extensive datasets. He calls for building sophisticated, Indian-specific large language models and ensuring AI development is sustainable and accessible to all.

Key Points: AI Will Create Jobs, Not Destroy Them: Amitabh Kant

  • AI will fundamentally change life
  • Focus on talent, skills, and computing power
  • Drive growth with renewable energy
  • Build Indian-specific AI models
3 min read

AI will change way of life; won't lead to job loss instead create jobs of different kinds: Amitabh Kant

Former G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant says AI will change life and create new, higher-quality jobs, leveraging India's talent and data for societal good.

"No technology ever leads to lost jobs. It creates new jobs, but of a different kind. - Amitabh Kant"

New Delhi, February 17

India's demographic strength and technological ambition position it uniquely in the global artificial intelligence race, said Amitabh Kant, Former G20 Sherpa of India, while speaking toon the sidelines of the India AI Impact Summit 2026.

Highlighting the country's youthful energy and vibrancy, Kant said the massive interest among young Indians in AI reflects the transformative potential of the technology.

"India has tremendous energy, great vibrancy, huge, huge number of young people," Kant said. "This very powerful technology will change fundamentally the way we live and the way we will grow and evolve."

He added that India must leverage AI to build a more equal society and reach its people.

Kant emphasized that talent, skill development and computing power will be central to India's AI journey.

"Talent, skill, computing power are all very important," he said.

At the same time, he stressed the importance of driving AI growth sustainably. "It's very important that we drive this technology with renewable energy... in a manner where we can ensure that it's for the good of the humanity as we move forward," he said.

Affordability, accountability and multilingual accessibility must remain key priorities to ensure AI benefits every Indian, noting the need to make it "accessible to every single Indian."

Addressing concerns about job losses due to automation, Kant dismissed fears of large-scale unemployment.

"No technology ever leads to lost jobs. It creates new jobs, but of a different kind," he said.

He argued that AI would generate new and higher-quality employment opportunities, adding, "You'll require more data scientists. You'll require more machine learners."

He underlined the need to alter course curriculums to prepare the workforce for emerging roles.

On India's global standing, Kant asserted that the country has the foundational strengths required to lead in AI, citing abundant talent, vast datasets and growing computing capacity.

"India has all the talent. Without talent, you can't drive AI. India has a lot of data sets. India is putting out, through AI course, a lot of data to its startups and researchers. It's providing computing powers. Large language models are being built, like Sarvam has done, in multilingual. And I think uh it's very, very important that we use this still talent, own data and our own computing power to build very Indian specific large language models. And once they are built, we need to refine them with our own data, use more and more data on Indian large language models so that they become very sophisticated in their use," he said.

The India-AI Impact Summit 2026 aims to foster dialogue on responsible AI governance, innovation ecosystems, digital public infrastructure, climate-conscious technology and equitable access to emerging technologies.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
I appreciate the optimism, but "no technology ever leads to lost jobs" feels like an oversimplification. What about the millions in traditional BPOs, basic data entry, or even junior coding roles? The transition will be painful for many unless skill development is massively accelerated and made accessible in smaller towns.
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Rohit P
Absolutely right about the young energy! My college's AI/ML club is overflowing. The key is affordable computing power and internet for all. Jio did it for mobile data, we need a similar revolution for GPU access for students and startups. The talent is here, just need the tools.
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Sarah B
The point about driving AI with renewable energy is so important and often overlooked. We cannot solve one problem by creating a bigger one (massive energy consumption). India's solar potential could be a game-changer here for sustainable AI development.
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Karthik V
"Alter course curriculums" - This is the most urgent point! Our education system is still teaching syllabus from 10 years ago. We need AI literacy from school level, not just IITs. Also, need courses in regional languages to truly democratize access. वरना पीछे रह जाएंगे।
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Meera T
Hoping the focus on "equitable access" is real. AI shouldn't become another tool that widens the gap between urban and rural, or between the English-speaking elite and the rest. Affordable, accountable, and accessible in my mother tongue - that's the dream. 🤞

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