India AI Summit 2026: Leaders Push for Product Economy & Inclusive AI Growth

Industry leaders at the India AI Impact Summit 2026 described the event as a galvanizing moment for the nation, emphasizing India's unique position as a global talent hub. Key discussions focused on the critical need for India to transition from a service-based economy to a product-oriented one to move up the value chain. Speakers stressed that AI adoption must be inclusive, ethical, and tailored to solve India's unique challenges to avoid leaving segments of the population behind. The summit also highlighted the significant potential for applying AI in sectors like healthcare for broad social good.

Key Points: India AI Summit 2026: Transition to Product Economy & Inclusive AI

  • Shift from service to product economy
  • Ensure inclusive AI adoption
  • Develop localised Indian solutions
  • Focus AI on healthcare and social good
4 min read

Industry leaders highlight transition to product economy, inclusive growth at India AI Impact Summit 2026

Industry leaders at India AI Summit 2026 highlight shift from services to products, ethical AI for social good, and India's unique talent advantage.

"We have to move away from the service economy to the product economy. - Sharad Agrawal"

New Delhi, February 18

Industry leaders at the India AI Summit 2026 described the summit as a galvanising moment for the country, highlighting India's unique position as a talent hub capable of driving innovation on a global scale. The discussions focused on moving from a service-based economy to a product-oriented one while ensuring that AI adoption remains inclusive and focused on social good.

Speaking to ANI, Harjiv Singh, Founder and CEO of CambrianEdge.ai, stated that the summit is one of the largest of its kind in the global south and emphasised the importance of a collective understanding of the technology.

"It's a galvanising moment for the country to really come behind and understand what this can do and transform our country and the world as well. Look at the speakers, look at the kind of heads of state and governments getting involved in this. I think it's very important that people understand the ramifications of AI, and I think this is a very important summit in that sense," Singh told ANI.

He noted that while frontier models currently remain concentrated in the US and China, India's demographic advantage provides a unique opportunity. "India can play a very important role by making sure that we use AI to educate and transform our population, especially the young one," he added.

Sharad Agrawal, CEO of Sify Data, characterised the event as a defining moment that allows experts to brainstorm in a transformative era. He emphasised the necessity for India to transition its economic focus. "We have to move away from the service economy to the product economy. We have to move up the value chain from the services to the product, and then this will assure that movement," Agrawal said to ANI.

He also noted that India must develop localised solutions, asserting that "we also need to understand that India is unique. Indian challenges are unique, and therefore, there has to be adaptation. On top of that, there have to be a lot more Indian ways to do it, and then there are multiple innovations happening in the country currently, multiple organisations who are looking ahead and developing newer models and newer kinds of ways so that we could solve India's problem. The world solution has never worked in India" and that the country must add to existing innovations to create its own leadership position.

The human element of AI adoption was also a key theme at the summit. Vanessa Smith, Chief Corporate Affairs Officer and President of ServiceNow, emphasised the need to consider ethical implications in technology deployment. "If we solely make decisions based on profit, based on consumerism, we could leave a large segment of the population behind. We need to include humans in the loop at every stage of AI adoption, whether in a mature or developing economy," Smith told ANI.

Parthasarthy Ranganathan, Vice President and Technical Fellow at Google, highlighted the energy of the summit and the value of diverse perspectives in shaping AI's evolution. He pointed toward AI in sectors such as healthcare. "So to me, it's particularly important to start thinking about how we can apply AI for social good. And I like the theme of this conference, which focuses on the impact of AI for good and as well. I'm very excited about AI for healthcare," he told ANI.

Speaking to ANI, Chairman of Amity Online, Ajit Chuahan, said, "India's role will be significant from a human capital perspective, but even from a hardware perspective. We know that AI is a five-layer cake, right from chips to applications, and right from blue skills to gray skills and to white skills. I think it'll play a role across all five domains, and AI and India will play a significant role in the skilling, hardware and infrastructure of AI development."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Vanessa Smith's point about not leaving people behind is crucial. As an expat working in Bengaluru, I see the tech boom, but also the risk of a digital divide. Inclusive growth means ensuring AI solutions reach farmers in Punjab and artisans in Varanasi, not just urban professionals.
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Priya S
Sharad Agrawal is spot on. "World solution has never worked in India." We need AI for Indian problems - predicting monsoon patterns better, diagnosing TB in rural clinics, managing chaotic urban traffic. Let's stop copying Silicon Valley and build for our own context.
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Rohit P
All good talk, but will it translate to action? We've had many "galvanising moments." The real test is funding for deep-tech startups, changes in our education system from rote learning to creativity, and government policies that support product companies, not just services.
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Kavya N
AI for healthcare! This is where my heart is. Imagine AI assistants helping ASHA workers in remote villages, or early detection systems for diseases common in India. If we get this right, the impact will be phenomenal. Let's hope the summit leads to real projects on the ground.
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Michael C
The hardware point by Ajit Chauhan is often overlooked. Everyone talks about software and data, but if we're dependent on imported chips, we have a strategic vulnerability. Building domestic capability in semiconductors is as important as training AI engineers.

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