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Home»Technology»India Faces a Looming Crisis: The Expanding Shortage of AI Talent
Technology

India Faces a Looming Crisis: The Expanding Shortage of AI Talent

July 1, 20264 Mins Read
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India’s AI Talent Shortage: A Growing Concern

As of 2024, India boasts around 420,000 professionals skilled in artificial intelligence (AI). However, the industry needs about 600,000, leading to a talent gap of nearly 50%. If the current pace of skills development doesn’t improve, this shortfall is expected to swell to over 1.4 million by 2026, according to a report by NASSCOM and McKinsey.

This issue isn’t just about hiring more people; it’s largely about how organizations develop their workforce. Companies that will navigate this talent shortage effectively will be the ones that foster AI knowledge across all teams, rather than relying solely on a specialized group of experts.

The Growing Demand for AI Skills

A joint report from NASSCOM and Deloitte, published in August 2024, indicates that demand for AI talent in India could surge from 600,000-650,000 to over 1.25 million between 2022 and 2027. This growth is expected due to a significant annual increase in the AI market. Yet, as of 2024, only about 16% of Indian IT workers were skilled in AI, according to the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology.

The challenge is more complicated than it seems. AI roles, like machine learning engineers and data scientists, are in high demand. However, educational programs have struggled to keep pace with the rapidly evolving AI landscape, and corporate training systems are still in the early stages of development.

What Indian Companies Are Doing to Bridge the Gap

Recognizing the urgency, major Indian tech firms have begun ramping up their training initiatives. In 2023-2024, TCS trained 350,000 employees in AI, while Wipro trained 220,000. Infosys implemented custom AI training programs and collaborated with educational institutions through its ‘Infosys Springboard’ initiative. Microsoft has also pledged to provide AI training for 2 million individuals in India by 2025.

While these initiatives represent significant efforts, they also highlight the scale of the problem. With over 500 million workers, helping two million employees gain AI skills is just a starting point. There’s a big difference between someone who can use a chatbot and someone who can adjust a complex AI model effectively.

Changing Entry-Level Job Roles

A study by NASSCOM and Deloitte predicts that AI will transform about 37% of entry-level IT jobs by 2026. This won’t necessarily lead to job losses but rather to a restructuring of roles. Tasks like software testing, basic coding, and data entry will evolve as AI tools take over routine processes. Workers will shift towards roles focused on quality assurance and oversight.

For businesses, this presents both risks and opportunities. There’s a danger that entry-level workers will find their skills outdated before they can adapt through training. However, companies can also take advantage of the situation by designing work environments where humans and AI complement each other—where AI handles the mundane while employees tackle complex challenges.

The Rise of AI in Daily Work

A recent Gartner report found that 88% of employees using enterprise AI also rely on personal AI tools for work, primarily to save time. This overlap is turning AI fluency into an essential skill for everyone, not just a specialized few. However, it also raises concerns about data security, as personal AI tools might expose sensitive company information. Employers need to find a balance that allows open access while ensuring clear policies are in place to protect data.

According to the Deloitte-NASSCOM report, 43% of workers in various sectors have used AI at their workplaces. Moreover, about 60% of employees believe gaining AI skills could boost their career prospects, with many planning to learn at least one digital skill focusing on AI and machine learning.

Building a Skilled Workforce

Organizations that greatly value AI capability treat it as a strategic asset. They identify the specific AI skills needed in all areas—from finance to customer service—and tailor their training programs accordingly. These companies measure AI proficiency similarly to any other important employee skill and integrate AI fluency into their hiring and training processes.

Acknowledging organizations that develop this kind of AI-savvy workforce is crucial, as it emphasizes that equipping every employee with AI knowledge is vital for thriving in the future job landscape.

In conclusion, the companies poised to excel in the AI era are not necessarily those that hire the most AI specialists, but those that empower every employee to harness the potential of AI.

Deloitte Infosys microsoft mlops NASSCOM nasscom community scope toi ai quotient awards workforcegartner
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