Indian Farmer Used AI Bot for Subsidies in 2023, Says Satya Nadella

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella highlighted the rapid and equitable diffusion of AI as a critical global challenge at the World Economic Forum in Davos. He cited the example of a rural Indian farmer who, in early 2023, used a simple AI-powered bot to understand and apply for government farm subsidies in his local language. Nadella emphasized that such technology can restore "agency" to individuals previously excluded from digital systems and belongs to the same transformative class as the internet or mobile. He called for coordinated leadership from both private and public sectors to ensure AI's benefits are widely accessible, particularly in the Global South.

Key Points: Satya Nadella: Indian Farmer Used AI Bot for Farm Subsidies

  • AI used by rural Indian farmer in 2023
  • Bot helped navigate government subsidies
  • AI can restore agency to people
  • Challenge is ensuring fast, equitable diffusion
  • Requires public-private leadership
3 min read

"A rural Indian farmer used a bot in 2023 for subsidies": Satya Nadella recalls AI adoption, power of tech diffusion

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella cites an Indian farmer's early 2023 use of an AI bot to access subsidies as a prime example of equitable AI diffusion.

"It was at the beginning of 2023, a rural Indian farmer was able to use a bot... to reason over some farm subsidies - Satya Nadella"

Davos, January 20

Pointing to how Artificial Intelligence is being used across the world, beyond advanced countries, Microsoft Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Satya Nadella recalled an Indian farmer who adopted AI to address problems.

Speaking of AI diffusion across the world, particularly the Global South, Naddella said that as early as early 2023, the rural Indian farmer used a simple AI-powered bot to navigate government farm subsidies in his local language.

"It was at the beginning of 2023, a rural Indian farmer was able to use a bot built, I think very early GPT 3 or 2.5 even, essentially to reason over some farm subsidies that he had heard about in a local language," he recalled.

The farmer not only sought information but asked the tool to complete forms on his behalf, an example, Nadella said, of how AI can restore "agency" to people previously excluded from digital systems.

In conversation with BlackRock Chair and CEO Laurence D. Fink at the World Economic Forum (WEF) 2026 in Davos, Nadella stressed that the most pressing challenge around AI is ensuring its rapid and equitable diffusion across the world.

"I think when it comes to AI, the real question in front of all of us is how do you ensure that the diffusion of AI happens, and happens fast," Nadella said.

He emphasised that data, models, and infrastructure must spread more evenly to create economic surplus across regions, particularly in the Global South.

Drawing parallels with past technological revolutions, Nadella noted that every major computing era, from mainframes and minicomputers to client-server systems, the web, mobile, and cloud, was fundamentally about digitising information and improving analytical and predictive power.

AI, he said, belongs to the same class of transformative technologies and may prove even more impactful.

"In that context, I would say that AI is of the same class, like the web or the internet, or mobile, or PC, or cloud, or maybe even greater," he said.

Nadella highlighted rapid advancements in AI's reasoning and prediction capabilities, as well as its growing ability to take action and remain coherent over long periods.

These improvements, he added, should ultimately help "bend the productivity curve" and generate widespread economic gains.

However, Nadella cautioned that widespread adoption of AI is closely linked to skilling and leadership.

He called for coordinated efforts from both the private and public sectors to ensure that AI tools are accessible and usable across societies.

"I feel ultimately it's going to require real leadership from the private sector, the public sector, to ensure the diffusion happens," he said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Nadella makes a good point about diffusion, but we need to be careful. How many farmers actually have the smartphone and internet access needed for this? The digital divide is still very real in rural India. The government needs to focus on infrastructure first.
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Aman W
As someone from a farming family in Punjab, I can see the potential. My uncle struggles with all the online forms for MSP. If a simple chatbot in Punjabi could help him, it would be a game-changer. Hope this tech becomes cheap and widespread soon.
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Sarah B
Fascinating example from India. It shows AI's potential isn't just in Silicon Valley. Restoring "agency" is a powerful way to frame it. The challenge of equitable access is global, but stories like this give hope.
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Karthik V
Proud to see an Indian example being highlighted at Davos! This is what Digital India should aim for - not just flashy apps, but tech that solves real problems for the common man. More power to our farmers and innovators! 🙏
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Nikhil C
The idea is great, but let's not get carried away by one example. For every tech-savvy farmer, there are a hundred who get cheated by middlemen because they can't navigate the system. AI tools need to be idiot-proof and available offline too.

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