India Urges Urgent AI Action for Inclusive Growth at Impact Summit

Chief Economic Advisor V. Anantha Nageswaran opened the India AI Impact Summit by warning that delays in harnessing AI narrow economic options and stressed immediate action is required for inclusive growth. He advocated for a "Team India" collaborative approach and fundamental education reforms to scale skills, cautioning that inaction could lead to instability. S. Krishnan, MeitY Secretary, emphasized that AI development must remain human-centric and ensure democratic access to its resources. The summit and accompanying expo in New Delhi bring together global tech firms, startups, and policymakers to showcase AI's potential.

Key Points: India AI Summit: CEA Warns Against Delay in AI for Growth

  • Urgent AI adoption needed for inclusive growth
  • Strengthen education and foundational skills
  • Requires "Team India" government-private-academia approach
  • AI must be human-centric and democratically accessible
2 min read

Can't afford delay in using AI for inclusive growth, says CEA Nageswaran

CEA Nageswaran calls for urgent AI adoption to drive inclusive growth, stressing education reform and a "Team India" approach at the India AI Impact Summit.

"India needs to act now to use the benefits of AI to promote inclusive growth. - V. Anantha Nageswaran"

Mumbai, Feb 16

As the highly-anticipated 'India AI Impact Summit 2026' kicked off in New Delhi on Monday, senior policymakers and leaders called for urgent action to use artificial intelligence to promote inclusive growth.

Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) V. Anantha Nageswaran warned that every year delaying AI progress narrows economic and technological options.

"India needs to act now to use the benefits of AI to promote inclusive growth," Nageswaran said, adding the country can become the first large society where human abundance and machine intelligence reinforce each other.

Nageswaran urged a "Team India" approach involving government, private sector, academia and policymakers, and stressed the need to strengthen foundational education and scale high-quality skills.

He said AI progress "will not happen by drift" and "requires urgency, political will and strong state capacity."

The first step toward AI‑led prosperity must begin with education and foundational skill reforms, the CEA said, and called for expansion of labour-intensive service sectors and removal of regulatory bottlenecks.

He cautioned that lack of calibrated action could trigger social and economic instability.

S. Krishnan, Secretary, Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, urged that AI development must remain human‑centric and democratically accessible.

Krishnan said the government's key message is that AI should ensure democratic access to resources while keeping people at the centre of technological transformation. "There needs to be democratic access to AI resources, and it must be done in a way that people are at the centre of this process," he said.

He described AI as a powerful driver of economic growth, noting its potential to accelerate development not just in India but across the Global South.

Earlier in the day, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said it is a matter of great pride that people from across the world are coming to India for the summit.

The AI Expo will be held from February 16 to 20, alongside the India AI Impact Summit, at the same venue in the national capital.

Spread across 10 arenas covering more than 70,000 square metres, it will bring together global technology firms, startups, academia and research institutions, Union Ministries, state governments, and international partners.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Rohit P
Good to see the emphasis on inclusive growth. Hope this isn't just summit talk. The real test will be in implementation - removing red tape and ensuring small businesses and farmers can actually access and benefit from AI tools. Democratizing access is easier said than done.
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Arjun K
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech, the urgency is real. Other nations are moving fast. India has the talent pool and the digital infrastructure (like UPI) to integrate AI for public good. The focus on labour-intensive service sectors is smart - it's about job creation, not just replacement.
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Karthik V
While the intent is good, I'm concerned. "Human-centric" and "democratic access" sound great, but what about data privacy and the digital divide? My village still has patchy internet. AI for inclusive growth must first ensure inclusive internet access and strong data protection laws.
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Meera T
Proud to see India hosting such a global summit! The potential for AI in agriculture, healthcare, and education in India is immense. Hope the collaboration between startups, academia, and government leads to tangible solutions for our local problems. Jai Hind!

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