India's DECKS Blueprint Flips Script on AI Job Fears, Charts New Path

A high-level roundtable in New Delhi released the "Future of Jobs in the Age of AI" report, challenging fears of job displacement. The report introduces the DECKS framework (Data, Energy, Collaboration, Knowledge, Software) to position India as a global leader in AI employment. Experts emphasized that jobs will evolve, not disappear, with new roles like prompt engineers and AI governance specialists emerging. The discussion highlighted the need for infrastructure investment, reskilling, and public-private partnerships to ensure inclusive growth.

Key Points: India's DECKS Blueprint: AI Jobs, Not Apocalypse

  • India's DECKS framework (Data, Energy, Collaboration, Knowledge, Software) repositions AI as job creator
  • Report identifies new roles: AI/ML engineers, prompt engineers, AI governance specialists
  • Public-Private Partnership model and data infrastructure treatment as critical
  • CEO roundtable stresses moving from service to high-value research and innovation
3 min read

Beyond the bot: India's ''DECKS'' blueprint flips the script on AI job fears

India unveils DECKS framework to lead AI job creation, not displacement. Report by Al4India & CPRG highlights new roles like prompt engineers.

"AI is one of the most consequential technologies of our time. Jobs will not disappear; they will evolve. - Lieutenant General Rakesh Kapoor (Retired)"

By Baishnavi Sharma, New Delhi, April 30

As global anxieties regarding artificial intelligence often centre on job displacement, a high-level roundtable in the national capital on Thursday presented a transformative roadmap, positioning India as a future leader in the AI-driven employment landscape.

Al4India and the Centre for Policy Research and Governance (CPRG) released their latest report, "Future of Jobs in the Age of AI: Emerging Roles, New Opportunities," at the ITC Maurya. The report, launched by a distinguished panel including Lieutenant General Rakesh Kapoor (Retired), Shashi Shekhar Vempati, Alok Agrawal, and Dr. Ramanand Pandey, challenges the narrative of disruption by highlighting the birth of entirely new employment categories.

The study argues that India's unique combination of a massive educated talent pool, robust digital public infrastructure, and a maturing innovation ecosystem places the nation in a strategic position to shape global AI development.

Offering a strategic perspective, Lieutenant General Rakesh Kapoor, (Retired), said, "AI is one of the most consequential technologies of our time. Jobs will not disappear; they will evolve."

He further stressed the necessity of a Public-Private Partnership model to strengthen foundational capabilities.

"Data infrastructure should be treated as critical infrastructure," he added, while introducing his 'DECKS' framework--integrating Data, Energy, Collaboration, Knowledge, and Software--to achieve India's technological aspirations.

Shashi Shekhar Vempati, Co-Founder of Al4India, noted that "a lot more new job opportunities are emerging, while many existing jobs will transition. Re-evaluation of roles and reskilling will be important going forward. This report serves as a ready reckoner for policymakers, industry, as well as education institutions in designing their programmes."

According to the report, the impact of AI is a structural transformation rather than a linear change, giving rise to roles such as AI/ML engineers, prompt engineers, and AI governance specialists. It advocates a rigorous focus on skilling and reskilling to ensure inclusive growth across the value chain.

Alok Agrawal, Co-Founder of Al4India, described the report as a sequel to their previous work on the 'Future of Employability'. He noted that "technological shifts have historically opened new avenues of growth," adding that AI will create fresh roles across various sectors.

Highlighting the objective of the study, Dr. Ramanand Pandey, Director of CPRG, stated, "This report shifts the conversation from fear to opportunity and highlights India's potential to lead the AI workforce transition."

The launch was followed by a CEO Roundtable featuring prominent voices, including Rajit Punhani (CEO, FSSAI), Bipin Preet Singh (Co-Founder, MobiKwik), and Mohit Jain (COO, Times of India Group), among others. The leaders deliberated on the necessity of moving from a service-driven approach to high-value capabilities in research and innovation.

During the session, Rajit Punhani, CEO of FSSAI, observed, "AI can significantly strengthen governance and service delivery, but trust and accountability must remain central."

The consensus among participants remained that, with targeted investment in infrastructure and policy frameworks, India is at a critical juncture to emerge as a global pioneer in the future of work.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
The emphasis on reskilling is crucial. I work in HR and we're already seeing demand for AI ethics roles and prompt engineers. India should lead in creating standards for these new jobs, not just follow global trends. Good read!
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Vikram M
While I appreciate the optimism, we need to be realistic about execution. The report sounds great on paper but ground-level skilling initiatives in smaller cities are still weak. Hope this translates into actual policy rather than just another report gathering dust.
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Rohit P
Lieutenant General Kapoor's public-private partnership suggestion is spot on. We need industry and academia to work together. The IITs and IIITs have great research but industry needs to absorb and scale it. DECKS could be our national AI strategy if implemented well.
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James A
Interesting perspective from India. As someone working in AI in the US, I see similar debates here. The DECKS framework seems more holistic than most Western approaches. India's demographic dividend could indeed be an advantage if the skilling push is real. Curious to see how this unfolds.
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Meera T
The point about "trust and accountability" by the FSSAI CEO is critical. AI governance specialists will be in high demand - especially in sectors like healthcare, finance, and food safety. India has a chance to set global benchmarks if we get the regulatory framework right. Let's hope the government acts on this.
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