India Feeds 33% More Data to ChatGPT Than US: Amitabh Kant's AI Warning

G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant revealed at the India AI Summit that India provides 33% more data to ChatGPT than the United States, highlighting the Global South's crucial role in AI development. He warned that without a framework like Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), AI risks creating a deeply unequal global society. Kant argued for AI to move beyond English-centric models and become natively multilingual to be truly inclusive and serve diverse populations. He emphasized that the ultimate goal must be to transform citizens' lives in the Global South, not just increase Big Tech valuations.

Key Points: India's AI Data Lead & Call for Indigenous AI Models

  • India provides 33% more data to ChatGPT than US
  • AI must be accessible, affordable, accountable
  • Calls for Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) model
  • Warns of a deeply unequal global society
  • AI must be multilingual, not English-centric
3 min read

India gives 33% more data to ChatGPT than US: Amitabh Kant urges building indigenous AI via DPI

Amitabh Kant reveals India provides 33% more data to ChatGPT than the US, urging a DPI-led, inclusive AI model to prevent global inequality.

"If we end up creating an inequal society... we have failed. - Amitabh Kant"

New Delhi, February 17

G20 Sherpa and former NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant on Tuesday emphasised that while Artificial Intelligence is set to disrupt every sector and way of life, its evolution must be guided by three pillars- accessibility, affordability, and accountability.

Futher, he warned that without a framework of "Digital Public Infrastructure" (DPI) to make Artificial Intelligence, risks creating a deeply unequal global society."

Speaking on the transformative power of AI on the second day of the India AI Summit 2026 in New Delhi, Kant highlighted a significant disparity in how Large Language Models (LLMs) are currently trained, noting that the Global South, and India in particular, is the engine room of AI development.

"The important thing is that today we in India. I mean, if you look at open AI, Chat GPT, we are providing more data than the United States of America, 33% more data than what the United States of America do," Kant said.

He argued that for AI to be truly inclusive, it must move beyond English-centric models and become natively multilingual to serve diverse populations.

"These large language models are getting better and better on the basis of data from the Global South. It is essential that this contribution translates into benefits for these regions," Kant stated.

Drawing parallels to India's success in financial inclusion, Kant suggested that AI should follow the blueprint of the country's Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), which allowed the country to leapfrog and achieve decades' worth of developmental progress in just seven years.

"Our digital ecosystem worked, because our models were open-sourced. My view is that there has to be a layer of digital public identity in AI, on top of which we should allow private sector to open and compete," Kant said.

Kant was participating in a session "AI for India's Next Billion: Intergenerational Insights for Inclusive and Future-Ready Growth." Other panelists included Amandeep Singh Gill of the United Nations, Arunabha Ghosh, CEEW, Claire Melamed of, UN Foundation, Kunalika Gautam of UN Foundation, Ruchira Goyal of Sustainable Food Systems and Safiya Husain of Karya.

The former NITI Aayog CEO added that in his proposed hierarchy, social transformation can be achieved by utilizing the tech of AI to solve grassroots issues in health, education, and agriculture.

Reflecting on the post-World War II economic trajectory of the West, Kant warned that progress does not always guarantee equity. He cautioned that the current trajectory of massive AI investment could lead to a "highly inequal society" if the technology remains concentrated in the hands of a few.

"If we end up creating an inequal society... we have failed," Kant said stressing that the ultimate goal must be to transform the lives of citizens in the Global South, rather than just increasing the valuation of Big Tech.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Absolutely agree on the multilingual part. An AI that only understands English is useless for my grandmother in the village. Our diversity is our strength, and our tech must reflect that.
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David E
Fascinating perspective from India. The West often assumes technological leadership, but the data fueling the next wave is coming from here. The call for accountability and equitable benefits is spot on.
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Rohit P
UPI was a game-changer. If we can apply that same public infrastructure model to AI, it could be revolutionary. But execution is key. Hope the government and private sector can truly collaborate on this.
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Sarah B
The statistic about providing 33% more data than the US is staggering. It highlights a massive power imbalance in the digital economy. Kant's warning about creating an unequal society is a global concern.
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Karthik V
While the vision is excellent, I have a respectful criticism. We need to move beyond summits and speeches. Where is the concrete roadmap and funding for this indigenous AI DPI? The intent is clear, now we need action on the ground.
M
Meera T
Solving grassroots issues in health and education through AI - this is the real goal. Not just creating fancy chatbots, but tools that can help a community health worker or a teacher in a

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