India's AI Revolution: How 2026 Will Transform the Nation into a Global Tech Leader

India is poised for a major AI leap in 2026, currently ranking as the world's third most competitive nation in the field. Government initiatives like IndiaAI FutureSkills are creating a massive talent pipeline, with hundreds of thousands already trained and AI professionals projected to double by 2027. This growth is reflected globally, with India being the second-largest contributor to AI projects on GitHub in 2024. With a balanced, risk-based governance framework and a focus on solving India-centric problems, the nation is democratizing AI for economic growth and social impact.

Key Points: India's 2026 AI Leap: Talent, Jobs, and Global Leadership

  • AI talent to double by 2027
  • 18.5 lakh+ enrolled in govt skilling programs
  • 62% of Indians use GenAI at work
  • Balanced, risk-based governance approach
4 min read

IANS Year Ender 2025: India set to take a big AI leap in 2026 amid govt push

India ranks 3rd globally in AI competitiveness. With massive skilling initiatives and a pragmatic governance model, 2026 is set to be a transformative year for AI-driven growth.

"India was the second-largest contributor worldwide in 2024, accounting for 19.9 per cent of all AI projects. - GitHub Data"

New Delhi, Dec 27

India's artificial intelligence strategy, based on Prime Minister Narendra Modi's vision of democratising technology, aims to address India-centric challenges and create more opportunities and jobs -- and 2026 is going to be a transformative year for the country which has emerged as the world's third most competitive one in AI.

The country has seen AI talent concentration grow more than threefold since 2016, and now ranks among the top three countries in US-based Stanford University's Global AI Vibrancy Tool, reflecting its growing strength in AI talent and infrastructure.

Various initiatives of the government support the development of an AI talent pipeline, like 'IndiaAI FutureSkills,' which is one of the pillars of the IndiaAI mission, where focus is on developing AI talent and a research pipeline.

The government informed this month that AI may result in job creation in various streams like data science and data curation, and so far, 8.65 lakh candidates have enrolled or trained in various courses, including 3.20 lakh candidates in AI/Big Data Analytics technologies.

The IT Ministry has initiated 'FutureSkills PRIME,' a programme for re-skilling/up-skilling of IT manpower for employability in 10 new/emerging technologies, including AI.

Under this programme so far, over 18.56 lakh candidates have signed up on the Future Skills PRIME Portal, out of which, more than 3.37 lakh candidates have completed their course, according to Minister of State for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises, Shobha Karandlaje.

As per a recent Nasscom report titled "Advancing India's AI skills", the AI talent in India is expected to grow from 6 lakh-6.5 lakh professionals to more than 12.50 lakh professionals by the year 2027, at a 15 per cent compound annual growth rate (CAGR).

India's growing AI talent base is also reflected in global developer participation. As per global data on GitHub AI projects by geographic distribution, India was the second-largest contributor worldwide in 2024, accounting for 19.9 per cent of all AI projects.

This underscores the depth of India's AI developer ecosystem. It also validates the Government's focus on large-scale AI skilling, research and innovation under the IndiaAI Mission, according to Union Minister for Electronics and IT, Ashwini Vaishnaw.

The government is also supporting 500 PhD scholars, 5,000 postgraduates and 8,000 undergraduates for AI-related work.

IndiaAl Data and AI Labs are established in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities through NIELIT to conduct coursework in AI, data curation, annotation, cleaning and applied data science. Moreover, 174 lTIs and Polytechnics across 27 states/UTs have been approved to set up additional IndiaAl Data and AI Labs.

A recent 'EY 2025 Work Reimagined Survey' showed that around 62 per cent Indians are using GenAI at work regularly, whereas 90 per cent employers and 86 per cent employees believe that AI impacts productivity positively. Also, 75 per cent employees and 72 per cent employers believe that GenAI enhances decision-making, while 82 per cent employees and 92 per cent employers believe it positively impacts the quality of work.

Notably, the India AI governance guidelines do not allow unrestricted deployment of high-risk AI systems but adopt a risk-based, evidence-led and proportional governance approach.

The guidelines recognise that AI is a major driver of economic growth and social change. At the same time, it can also pose risks to individuals and society. Some of these include bias, discrimination, unfair outcomes, exclusion, and lack of transparency, according to Union Minister of State for Electronics and IT, Jitin Prasada.

In line with Prime Minister Modi's vision, the government is democratising the development and usage of technology. The focus is on using AI for solving real-world problems and ultimately improving lives across various sectors. The government has taken a balanced and pragmatic techno-legal approach towards its regulation. India's AI strategy has been formed after studying legal frameworks around the world and extensive consultation with stakeholders.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
The numbers are impressive – over 18 lakh candidates on FutureSkills! As someone who recently completed an AI upskilling course, I can vouch for the quality. It's helping many of us in non-tech roles transition. Hoping the job market keeps pace with this talent creation.
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Rohit P
Good to see the balanced approach on governance. We shouldn't copy-paste Western regulations. India needs its own framework that encourages innovation while managing risks like bias. The focus on solving India-centric problems in agriculture, healthcare, and logistics is the right way forward.
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Priya S
While the push is commendable, I hope there's equal focus on the quality of these courses and actual job placement. Enrolling lakhs is one thing, but are they getting industry-relevant, hands-on training? We need more public-private partnerships to ensure these skills are employable.
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Michael C
Second-largest contributor on GitHub AI projects globally – that's a massive achievement! It shows the raw, grassroots developer energy in India. If this government support can channel that into building world-class products and not just services, 2026 could be truly transformative.
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Kavya N
The support for 500 PhD scholars is music to my ears! For long-term leadership in AI, we need strong fundamental research, not just application development. Hope these scholars work on problems unique to our demography and languages. Jai Hind! 🙏

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