Saturday, February 28, 2026

Structural Transformation of the Indian IT Sector

 

Structural Transformation of the Indian IT Sector

By R Kannan

The Indian IT sector, a $315 billion engine of the national economy, is currently navigating its most significant pivot since the Y2K era. Recent reports from Jefferies ("P(AI)n Not Over Yet") and Citrini Research have sparked intense debate, with the latter modelling a "stress test" scenario where traditional outsourcing reaches an inflection point by 2028.

 

Present Business Model

Labour Arbitrage: From Cost-Savings to "Economic Arbitrage"

Traditional labour arbitrage was not just about "cheaper" workers; it was a sophisticated exploitation of global economic disparities.

  • The 3-to-1 Ratio: Historically, an Indian engineer cost approximately 20–30% of their Western counterpart. This allowed Fortune 500 companies to triple their "innovation capacity" without increasing their budget.
  • Currency Play: The model benefited significantly from the long-term depreciation of the Indian Rupee (INR) against the US Dollar (USD). Since revenues were in dollars and costs (salaries) were in rupees, IT firms enjoyed a built-in margin cushion.
  • The "Follow the Sun" Model: Arbitrage wasn't just financial; it was temporal. By leveraging the 10.5 to 12.5-hour time difference between India and the US, Indian firms pioneered the 24/7 development cycle. While the client slept, the Indian team executed, creating a "continuous productivity" loop that Western firms could not replicate in-house.

Linear Scaling: The "Industrialization" of Talent

The most defining characteristic of the traditional model was its linearity. In this era, the "Factory Model" reigned supreme.

  • Headcount as a Proxy for Growth: For decades, the stock market valued TCS or Infosys based on their "Net Additions." If a company hired 20,000 freshers, it was a guaranteed signal that $1 billion in revenue was coming. Revenue and headcount moved in a nearly perfect 1:1 ratio.
  • The Campus Recruitment Engine: To fuel this linearity, Indian IT firms built the world’s most sophisticated "Entry-Level Supply Chain." They transformed engineering graduates into "Billable Resources" via intensive 3–6 month training bootcamps (like the Infosys Mysore campus).
  • The Utilization Metric: Success was measured by "Utilization Rates"—the percentage of the workforce currently assigned to a paying client. This created a high-pressure environment where "Bench Time" (unassigned employees) was seen as the greatest threat to profitability.

Managed Services Pyramid: The "Annuity" Cash Cow

Managed Services, particularly Application Managed Services (AMS), acted as the "utility bill" of the corporate world. These are the "keep-the-lights-on" (KTLO) activities.

  • High Stickiness, Low Volatility: While digital transformation projects are discretionary, maintaining a bank’s core ledger or a retailer's ERP system is mandatory. This created "annuity-style" revenue—predictable, long-term contracts lasting 5–10 years.
  • The Pyramid Structure: The delivery model was a strict pyramid. A few high-cost "Onsite" architects in New York or London managed a massive "Offshore" army of junior developers in Bangalore or Pune. This maximized the spread between what the client paid per hour and what the junior developer earned.
  • The Deflationary Threat: As noted in the Jefferies report, this is the most vulnerable segment today. These tasks (testing, maintenance, support) are highly repeatable, making them the primary targets for AI-driven automation. What once required a team of 50 to maintain can now be monitored by 5 people and an "Agentic AI" layer.

T&M (Time & Material): The "Efficiency Paradox"

The T&M pricing model was the bedrock of the industry, but it created a fundamental misalignment of incentives between the provider and the client.

  • The "Hours" Incentive: In a T&M contract, the IT firm is paid for the effort (hours worked), not the outcome (software quality or business growth). This incentivized "Body Shopping"—placing as many people on a project for as long as possible.
  • Resistance to Automation: Under T&M, if an Indian IT firm introduced a tool that cut the work time by 50%, they effectively cut their own revenue by 50%. This created a "Legacy Trap" where firms were slow to adopt automation because it cannibalized their billable hours.
  • The Shift to Outcome-Based Models: As the Jefferies analysis suggests, the industry is now being forced away from T&M toward "Fixed Price" or "Outcome-Based" models. In these new models, AI becomes a friend rather than a foe; if a firm can use AI to do 100 hours of work in 10 hours, they keep the profit from the 90 hours saved.

Financial Performance Snapshot (Q3 FY26)

The sector is currently at a "dual-speed" inflection point. Traditional services are growing slowly, while AI-specific verticals are surging.

Metric (Q3 FY26)

TCS

Infosys

HCLTech

Wipro

Annualized AI Revenue

$1.8 Billion

(Integrated in Topaz)

$146 Million (Advanced AI)

AI-led Deal Focus

Operating Margin

25.2%

21.2% (Adjusted)

18.6%

17.6%

QoQ CC Growth

0.8%

0.6%

4.2%

-1.0% to 1.0% (Proj)

AI Revenue Growth

17.3% QoQ

4,600+ Active Projects

19.9% QoQ

Strong Pipeline

 

Strategic Margin Analysis: The "AI-Efficiency" Hedge

The most critical takeaway for 2026 is that AI is no longer just a cost center; it is a margin protector.

TCS: The Efficiency Benchmark

TCS has maintained an industry-leading operating margin of 25.2%. This stability is driven by:

  • The "Zero Ops" Framework: Automating internal infrastructure management.
  • Workforce Optimization: A reduction in headcount by over 11,000 in Q3 FY26 suggests that AI-led delivery is allowing the firm to do "more with less," effectively decoupling revenue growth from linear hiring.

Infosys: The Platform Play

With Infosys Topaz Fabric, the company has moved 90% of its top 200 clients onto AI-enabled workflows.

  • Value-Based Selling: By shifting to "Maximus" (their internal lean/automation program), Infosys added 40 basis points to its margins, proving that productivity gains from AI are being retained as profit rather than just passed to the client.

HCLTech: The Engineering Edge

HCLTech emerged as the growth leader in Q3 FY26 with a 4.2% sequential jump.

  • Physical AI & Silicon: Their focus on "Edge AI" and custom chip design for global tech majors has created a high-margin niche that traditional IT firms struggle to replicate.

Stock Valuation & Market Sentiment

Despite strong AI numbers, the NIFTY IT index saw a 6.5% drop in early February 2026. This reflects a "Sentiment vs. Fundamentals" tug-of-war.

  • The Fear: Markets worry that Agentic AI (like Anthropic’s legal plugins or Palantir’s AIP) will automate white-collar work so fast that it will shrink the total addressable market for human-led services.
  • The Reality: Analysts from J.P. Morgan and others suggest this is a "valuation reset" rather than a fundamental collapse. Companies like TCS are seeing their highest-ever "Total Contract Value" (TCV) in AI, indicating that while individual tasks get cheaper, the volume of transformation work is exploding.

Risks and Headwinds for Late 2026

  • The "Labor Code" Impact: A collective ₹5,400 crore ($650M+) one-time regulatory hit due to new Indian labour codes impacted net profits across the board in Q3.
  • ROI Lag: Hyperscalers (Microsoft, AWS, Google) are spending over $500 billion on capex in 2026. If these investments don't show clear ROI for end-clients by late 2026, there could be a "cooling off" period for IT service orders.

The "Vanguard" Phase

The consensus among CEOs (like TCS’s Krithivasan and HCL’s Vijayakumar) is that the sector is entering a "Vanguard" phase. This is defined by a shift from "pilots" to "scaled agents." By mid-2026, we expect to see the first Fortune 500 earnings reports that explicitly credit Indian IT partners for double-digit efficiency gains.

 

AI Driven Disruption

The traditional model was not just a business strategy; it was a massive socio-economic engine that relied on the industrialization of human intellect. However, as AI begins to automate the "managed services" that make up nearly half of the sector's revenue, the industry must pivot from being a provider of labour to a provider of solutions.

Revenue Deflation: The Death of the "Legacy Tax"

Historically, Indian IT firms earned high margins by maintaining "spaghetti code" and legacy systems (like COBOL or old Java) that were too complex for clients to touch.

  • Automated Modernization: Tools like Claude Code and GitHub Copilot are now capable of mapping entire legacy codebases and refactoring them in seconds.
  • The Loss of "Billable Inertia": What used to be a 3-year "Application Modernization" project involving 200 developers is now a 6-month project involving 20 AI-augmented architects. The revenue that used to "linger" for years is evaporating as AI removes the friction of technical debt.

Decoupling Headcount from Revenue: Breaking the 1:1 Correlation

The most radical shift is the end of "Linear Scaling."

  • Productivity Over Presence: In the old model, 10% revenue growth required 10% more employees. Today, companies are aiming for "Jobless Growth."
  • The "Human + AI" Unit: Firms are redefining the "Unit of Delivery." Instead of billing for a junior developer’s time, they are billing for a "Digital Worker" or an "AI-Augmented Pod." This allows for non-linear scaling where revenue can rise while the employee base remains flat or even shrinks.

Managed Services Shrinkage: Automating the "Keep-the-Lights-On" (KTLO)

Managed services (testing, L1/L2 support, infrastructure maintenance) account for 22–45% of "Big Five" revenues. This is the most "automatable" segment.

  • Self-Healing Systems: AI agents can now monitor server logs, predict failures, and execute "self-healing" scripts without a human ticket being raised.
  • The Testing Collapse: Automated test-case generation and execution are making traditional manual testing teams obsolete. As Jefferies notes, this core service is facing massive deflation because the "volume of work" simply doesn't exist anymore.

Increased Cyclicality: From "Annuity" to "Project" Revenue

Indian IT was loved by investors for its "annuity" revenue—predictable monthly checks. AI is changing this.

  • Advisory vs. Maintenance: Revenue is shifting toward "Advisory & Implementation" (helping a client set up their AI stack).
  • CapEx Dependency: Unlike maintenance (which is a mandatory operating expense), AI projects are capital expenditures. If a client’s CEO decides to cut spending next quarter, the AI project is paused. This makes IT firm revenues more volatile and sensitive to global economic cycles.

Pricing Pressure: The "Productivity Give-back"

Clients are no longer willing to pay for "inefficiency."

  • The 30% Discount: Large enterprises (like banks and retailers) are entering renewal negotiations demanding 20–30% price cuts. Their argument is simple: "If your developers are using AI to be 50% faster, why am I still paying the same hourly rate?"
  • The Transparency Trap: As AI tools become standard, the "black box" of development is opening, allowing clients to calculate exactly how much time an AI tool saved the provider.

Margin Compression: The "Investment S-Curve"

While AI promises efficiency, the initial cost of this transition is staggering.

  • Expensive Intelligence: Hiring a "Generative AI Architect" can cost 5x more than a traditional full-stack developer.
  • GPU and Infra Costs: Firms must invest heavily in proprietary AI platforms and sovereign clouds to ensure client data remains secure. These high "upfront" costs are hitting operating margins before the efficiency gains have fully kicked in.

Cannibalization: The Strategic "Suicide"

To stay competitive, Indian IT firms are being forced to sell products that destroy their own revenue streams.

  • Proactive Replacement: If an IT firm doesn't pitch an AI solution that replaces 50 of their own billable staff, a competitor (or a specialized AI startup) will.
  • The Innovator’s Dilemma: This creates a painful internal conflict where sales teams are incentivized to sell "less labour" to keep the client, effectively shrinking their own account size to prevent a total loss.

Valuation Derating: From "Growth" to "Value" Stocks

The stock market is re-evaluating the "Terminal Value" of Indian IT.

  • Multiples Compression: During the digital boom, firms traded at 30x-40x Price-to-Earnings (P/E) multiples.
  • The "Slow Growth" Reality: Jefferies suggests that if revenue growth slows due to AI deflation, these stocks will be re-rated as "Value" stocks (like utilities) with much lower multiples (15x-20x), leading to potential share price drops of 30-60% in downside scenarios.

Skill Obsolescence: The "Bench" as a Liability

In the old model, having 20,000 people on the "bench" (waiting for projects) was an asset—it meant you could start work instantly.

  • Legacy Skillsets: Today, a bench filled with manual testers and basic Java coders is a massive financial liability.
  • The Re-skilling Race: The industry is frantically trying to turn "coders" into "prompt engineers" and "domain experts." As Keshav Murugesh noted, the gap is no longer in volume of people, but in "deep business domain knowledge."

Internalization by Clients: The Rise of "Vibe-Coding"

Hyperscalers like AWS (with Bedrock) and Microsoft (with Copilot) are giving tools directly to the "Business User."

  • Bypassing the IT Vendor: If a Marketing Manager can use a low-code AI tool to build their own internal dashboard by simply "describing" it (vibe-coding), they no longer need to hire an Infosys or Wipro team to build it for them.
  • The "Shadow IT" Explosion: This decentralizes technology, moving the power back to the client's internal departments and shrinking the total addressable market (TAM) for third-party developers.

Strategies – Adopted

Massive Upskilling: Building the World's Largest AI Workforce

The scale of retraining is unprecedented. NASSCOM’s 2026 Strategic Review indicates that over 2 million IT professionals have been upskilled in fundamental AI.

  • The "Advanced" Tier: Roughly 300,000 of these are "advanced" practitioners—experts in LLM fine-tuning, RLOF (Reinforcement Learning from Optimal Feedback), and MLOps.
  • Mandatory AI Literacy: Companies like TCS and Wipro have made AI certification a prerequisite for year-end appraisals, ensuring that even non-technical roles (HR, Sales) understand AI governance.

Strategic Partnerships: The Anthropic-Infosys Model

Indian firms are no longer just "vendors" for Big Tech; they are co-innovation partners.

  • Custom Agentic AI: The Infosys-Anthropic partnership (announced Feb 2026) is a prime example. They are building industry-specific "Claude Agents" for highly regulated sectors like Telecom and Banking.
  • Vertical Integration: By combining Anthropic’s frontier models with Infosys Topaz, they are creating "Enterprise Brains" that can handle complex compliance tasks autonomously.

AI-First Delivery: The End of "Manual First" Coding

TCS has pioneered the AI-integrated delivery model. In this framework, no developer starts with a blank IDE.

  • The Productivity Jump: Internal data from major firms show that AI-led transformation has accelerated, with AI services revenue for TCS alone hitting an annualized $1.8 billion by Q3 FY26.
  • Shift in Role: The junior developer’s role has shifted from "writer" to "reviewer," focusing on logic validation rather than syntax.

Platformization: Selling IP, Not Just Hours

To combat the erosion of billable hours, firms are moving toward IP-led growth.

  • Infosys Topaz & HCLTech AI Force: These aren't just tools; they are comprehensive ecosystems. Instead of charging for 100 engineers, a firm might charge for access to a platform that automates 70% of the work, supplemented by 30 expert consultants.
  • Topaz Fabric: Recently launched, this platform provides close to 600 purpose-built agents out-of-the-box to accelerate industry-specific workflows.

Outcome-Based Pricing: Trading Hours for Value

The 40-year-old "Time & Material" (T&M) model is under pressure. Clients now demand to pay for results.

  • Success Fees: Contracts are increasingly structured around "Value Delivered"—e.g., "We only get paid if we reduce your server downtime by 20% or increase customer retention by 15%."
  • Shared Risk: While this puts more pressure on the IT firm, it allows for significantly higher margins if their AI platforms deliver exceptional efficiency.

Specialized "AI Labs": Moving Beyond the PoC

In 2024, most AI projects were Proof of Concepts (PoCs) that never reached production. In 2026, the focus is Scaled Production.

  • Centres of Excellence (CoEs): These labs are now "factory-style" operations. For instance, Tech Mahindra’s labs focus specifically on Physical AI and Edge AI, helping manufacturers run AI on factory-floor devices rather than the cloud.
  • Co-innovation Spaces: Many of these labs are co-located with clients to drive "rapid value realization."

The New Talent & Business Models

Strategy

Action Detail

Impact

GCC-as-a-Service

Helping MNCs build their own Global Capability Centres.

Turns potential "loss of business" into a consulting revenue stream.

Agentic AI Focus

Systems that act independently on complex workflows.

Enables autonomous handling of claims, supply chains, and network repairs.

Lateral Hiring Shift

Hiring niche experts in data science and AI ethics.

Reduces training lead-time; shifts focus to high-value leadership roles.

Consolidation Deals

Bidding for "Mega-deals" (over $500M).

Provides long-term "sticky" revenue while AI transformations are implemented.

 

Agentic AI & Sector Specifics: Tech Mahindra & NVIDIA

Firms are moving away from "General AI" to "Agentic AI" tailored for niches.

  • TechM Orion: An agentic platform built on NVIDIA accelerated computing that uses over 200 pre-built agents to reason and act across enterprise systems.
  • Project Indus 2.0: A focus on localized LLMs (Hindi and dialects) to automate telecom operations and customer service in the Indian market.

The industry is currently navigating a "VUCA" environment. While AI threatens to cannibalize traditional maintenance revenue, it is opening a $300 billion opportunity in transformation services.

 

Strategies - Future

To transition from a traditional "Efficiency Partner" to a future-ready "Intelligence Partner," Indian IT firms must undergo a foundational metamorphosis. Based on the strategic shifts outlined, the following could be the strategies by the Companies.

Adopt "Ghost GDP" Metrics

The industry must stop equating "hiring" with "health."

  • Revenue Per Employee (RPE): This becomes the north star. Firms must aim to double or triple their RPE by leveraging AI "force multipliers."
  • The Productivity Paradox: Success should be measured by how much work is done without adding staff. This "Ghost GDP"—the output generated by AI agents—must be tracked as a core KPI to prove value to shareholders who are currently derating the sector.

Verticalize AI: From General to Sovereign SLMs

Generic LLMs like GPT-4 are "jacks of all trades." The future belongs to Small Language Models (SLMs) trained on proprietary industry data.

  • Domain Mastery: Firms must build "Nursing-LLMs" for healthcare or "Compliance-LLMs" for European banking.
  • The "Moat" Strategy: By owning the model that understands the specific nuances of a client’s vertical, the IT firm becomes irreplaceable, moving away from being a commodity provider of general coding.

Monetize IP: The Shift from "Rent-a-Human" to "License-a-Solution"

The "Time & Material" model is a death trap in an AI world.

  • Value-Based Pricing: Firms must charge for "Outcome-as-a-Service." If an AI tool migrates a database in one-tenth the time, the firm should charge based on the value of the migration, not the hours the tool ran.
  • IP Accelerators: Developing proprietary frameworks that clients "subscribe" to creates high-margin, recurring revenue that decouples profit from headcount.

Embed Cybersecurity: AI-Driven Defence

As AI makes cyberattacks more sophisticated (e.g., AI-generated phishing), security cannot be an "add-on" service.

  • Security-by-Design: Every line of code generated by an AI agent must be automatically audited by a security AI.
  • Threat Hunting: Moving from reactive patching to proactive, AI-driven threat hunting becomes a premium service that justifies higher margins.

Pivot to "Sovereign Cloud" and Data Localization

Global clients are increasingly terrified of "Data Leakage" into public AI models.

  • Local Intelligence: IT firms must help clients build "Private AI" on sovereign clouds that comply with local laws (like India's DPDP Act or Europe's GDPR).
  • The Trust Anchor: Position the firm as the guardian of the client’s data "sanctity," ensuring their trade secrets aren't used to train a competitor’s model.

Redesign the Pyramid: The "Diamond" Workforce

The traditional "Junior-Heavy" pyramid (masses of freshers managed by a few seniors) is structurally unsound in the AI era.

  • The Rise of the Mid-Level: AI replaces the junior's tasks (documentation, basic testing). The "Diamond" shape emerges, consisting of fewer juniors, a massive middle layer of "AI Orchestrators," and a sharp peak of senior strategists.
  • Mastery over Labor: Hiring will shift toward "Polymaths"—people who understand both the code and the business logic.

Orchestration Services: The "Agent" Manager

As enterprises deploy hundreds of specialized AI agents, they will face "Agent Chaos."

  • The Orchestrator Role: Indian IT firms must become the "Central Nervous System" that manages, audits, and connects disparate AI agents from Microsoft, Google, and niche startups into a cohesive business workflow.

Data Modernization: Fixing the "Garbage In" Problem

AI is only as good as the data it eats. Most Fortune 500 companies have messy, siloed data.

  • The Foundation Layer: The immediate goldmine is "Data Remediation"—cleaning, labelling, and structuring decades of corporate data so it can actually be used by an LLM. This is the prerequisite for all AI success.

Automated Legacy Migration: Capturing the $1T COBOL Market

There is over $1 trillion worth of legacy code (COBOL, Mainframe) still running the world’s banks.

  • The AI Bridge: Firms must use AI-led factory models to "auto-translate" this legacy code into modern, cloud-native languages. This turns a slow, manual "migration" into a high-speed "industrialized" process.

Flexible Resource Pools: The "Gig-Economy" for Niche Talent

To maintain margins, firms cannot keep every niche expert on a full-time salary.

  • The Hybrid Bench: Using "Gig-platforms" to bring in specialists for 3-week "sprints." This allows the firm to scale capabilities up or down without the "dead weight" of an expensive, underutilized bench.

ESG-AI Alignment: The "Green AI" Imperative

AI is energy-hungry. Clients now have strict sustainability targets.

  • Algorithmic Efficiency: Firms that can prove their AI solutions are "Carbon-Neutral" or use "Green GPUs" will win contracts over those who ignore the environmental cost of computation.

In-house LLM Development: Capturing "Bharat"

The domestic Indian market is massive but underserved by Western AI.

  • Vernacular AI: Developing models that understand the 22 official languages of India allows IT firms to capture the massive digitization wave happening in India’s public sector and rural economy.

Consulting-Led Sales: From "Order-Takers" to "Change-Makers"

The era of "Staff Augmentation" is over.

  • The Consultant Mindset: Sales teams must stop asking "How many people do you need?" and start asking "What business outcome are you trying to achieve?" This requires training salespeople in "Commercial Acumen" and "Industry Strategy."

Real-time ROI Dashboards: Proving the Value

In a deflationary environment, firms must justify their costs daily.

  • The "Savings" Mirror: Providing clients with a dashboard that shows exactly how much "Agentic AI" has saved them in man-hours or error-reduction ensures the IT firm’s contract is never on the chopping block.

Cultural Transformation: Killing the "Wait-for-Order" Mentality

The greatest hurdle is cultural. For 30 years, Indian IT thrived by doing exactly what the client asked.

  • Proactive Innovation: In the AI era, the client often doesn't know what is possible. The culture must shift to "Proactive Disruption"—where the IT firm suggests ways to eliminate its own existing manual processes before a competitor does.

Sequence of Actions

To transition from a legacy service provider to a future-ready "Intelligence Partner," Indian IT firms must execute a precise, sequential transformation.

Audit & Assessment: Mapping the "At-Risk" Revenue

Before a firm can move forward, it must understand the vulnerability of its own balance sheet.

  • The 30% Vulnerability Zone: Firms must conduct a granular audit to identify which segments—specifically manual testing, L1/L2 support, and basic application maintenance—are most susceptible to AI deflation. As Jefferies notes, these areas account for 22–45% of revenue and are the "low-hanging fruit" for client-led automation.
  • Cannibalization Heatmaps: Creating a "Risk Map" helps leadership decide where to proactively introduce AI to a client (to save the relationship) versus where to defend traditional margins for as long as possible.

Internal AI Implementation: The "Eat Your Own Dog Food" Phase

Before selling AI to a Fortune 500 bank, IT firms must prove it works within their own "Software Factories."

  • The 40% Productivity Benchmark: Firms are integrating tools like GitHub Copilot and internal LLMs to automate documentation, code generation, and unit testing. The goal is a 40% increase in developer velocity.
  • Margin Cushioning: This internal efficiency serves as a financial hedge. If a client demands a 20% price cut due to AI, the firm can only protect its margins if it has already achieved a 40% internal productivity gain.

Standardization: Building the "Unified AI Engine"

Fragmented AI efforts across different business units lead to "pilot purgatory" and wasted R&D.

  • The Platform Approach: Leading firms are creating unified platforms (e.g., TCS AI.Cloud or Infosys Topaz). These act as a "Central Operating System" for AI, providing standardized security, ethical AI guards, and reusable code blocks.
  • Preventing "Shadow AI": Standardization ensures that every developer in the company is using the same high-tier models and data protocols, ensuring consistent delivery quality for global clients.

Client Pilot Programs: From PoC to Production

The industry is currently littered with "Proof of Concepts" (PoCs) that never scale. The goal now is conversion.

  • The 15% Conversion Target: Firms must shift focus from "experimenting" to "industrializing." This involves moving from a single chatbot pilot to a "multi-year production deal" where AI is integrated into the client’s core ERP or CRM systems.
  • Demonstrating Agentic AI: As WNS CEO Keshav Murugesh suggests, pilots must move beyond simple "Generative" tasks to "Agentic" tasks—where AI actually executes business processes rather than just answering questions.

Value-Based Re-pricing: Breaking the Hourly Shackles

The traditional "Time & Material" model is the greatest obstacle to AI adoption.

  • Gain-Sharing Clauses: Firms are renegotiating contracts to include "Efficiency Gain Sharing." If an IT firm saves a client $10 million using AI, they negotiate to keep $3 million of that saving as a "Value Fee," rather than being "punished" with lower billable hours for being efficient.
  • Outcome-Based Billing: This aligns the firm’s incentives with the client’s success, turning the IT provider into a "Business Partner" rather than a "Labor Vendor."

Strategic M&A: Buying the "Front-End" Brain

Indian IT has historically been great at "Execution" (Back-end) but weaker at "Advisory" (Front-end).

  • Boutique Acquisitions: Expect a wave of acquisitions of small AI consulting firms in the US and Europe. These firms bring high-level "C-Suite" access and the ability to consult on AI strategy.
  • Filling the Logic Gap: AI modernization is not "plug-and-play" because legacy business logic is often poorly documented. Acquisitions help bridge the gap between "Old Code" and "New AI Architecture."

Hybrid Cloud Integration: Building the "AI Backbone"

AI cannot run on legacy infrastructure. It requires "Cloud 3.0."

  • Sovereign & Hybrid Cloud: Clients are moving away from public clouds for sensitive AI workloads. IT firms must become experts in "Sovereign Clouds"—localized data centres that keep AI training data within national borders to comply with strict regulations like GDPR.
  • The "Data Layer" Backbone: AI is only as good as the data it accesses. This phase focuses on building the high-speed data pipelines required to feed LLMs in real-time.

Talent Transformation: Reskilling the "Bench"

In the AI era, a "bench" of 20,000 manual testers is a liability.

  • The 50% Pivot: Firms are aggressively retraining half of their traditional workforce into "Data Engineers" and "AI Orchestrators."
  • From Coder to Prompt Engineer: The role of the developer is shifting from "writing syntax" to "reviewing AI-generated architecture." This requires a higher level of domain expertise and commercial acumen, as emphasized by industry leaders.

Industry-Specific Solutions: The Rise of "Vertical Clouds"

Generic AI is becoming a commodity. Specialized AI is where the profit lies.

  • Pre-trained Vertical Data: Firms are launching "Industry Clouds" (e.g., a "Retail Cloud" pre-trained on inventory patterns or a "Healthcare Cloud" for clinical trial data).
  • Deep Domain Moats: By providing a model that already "knows" banking regulations or pharmaceutical compliance, the IT firm creates a "moat" that generic AI startups cannot easily cross.

The "Intelligence Partner" Pivot: Final Rebranding

The final stage is a total identity shift.

  • Business Intelligence vs. Software Services: The firm stops selling "Software Engineers" and starts selling "Business Outcomes." Success is no longer measured by the number of people on a project, but by the "Intelligence" and "Agility" injected into the client's business.
  • The Terminal Value Reset: Successful execution of this 10-step sequence allows firms to escape the "Value Multiple" trap mentioned by Jefferies, potentially rerating the stock as a high-growth "AI Tech" company rather than a slow-growth "Service" utility.

Conclusion

The transition will be painful. Operating margins are already under pressure as firms race to hire expensive AI talent while their legacy revenue streams shrink. Markets are already reacting; the Nifty IT index has lagged the broader market as investors fear a "Value Derating."

The Indian IT sector has reinvented itself before—moving from Y2K bug fixes to cloud transformation. But this time, the enemy is not a technical glitch; it is the very efficiency the industry has spent thirty years perfecting. To survive, the Software Factory must shut down its assembly lines and become a laboratory of intelligence. The era of "bodies in seats" is over; the era of "intelligence per employee" has begun.

 

 

Sunday, February 22, 2026

India’s AI Moment: From Global Vision to Ground-Level Transformation - Report

India’s AI Moment: From Global Vision to Ground-Level Transformation

R Kannan

Introduction

India stands at a defining crossroads, evolving from a digital transformation hub into a central architect of the global artificial intelligence revolution. The recent Global AI Summit in New Delhi marked a historic inflection point as the first major AI gathering led by a Global South nation. Prime Minister Narendra Modi articulated a human-centric vision, positioning AI as a global common good designed to augment rather than replace human capability. This summit signalled a shift in technological power, moving governance discussions beyond Western capitals to include emerging economies.

With over $250 billion in investment commitments secured, India has signalled its intent to lead the next chapter of global innovation. The gathering brought together heads of state, tech titans like Sam Altman and Sundar Pichai, and global investors to shape a shared, inclusive future. Ultimately, the event repositioned India from a technology consumer to a primary agenda-setter in the age of intelligence.

Statements by Leading Dignitaries

Narendra Modi — Prime Minister of India

Prime Minister Narendra Modi emphasized that Artificial Intelligence must be inclusive, human-centric, and designed to co-evolve with human potential rather than replace it. He articulated a vision in which AI serves as an empowering force that enhances human creativity, productivity, and problem-solving capacity. According to him, AI systems should reflect shared global values, promote equitable access, and prevent technological monopolies that widen the digital divide.

He underscored that open development frameworks and collaborative innovation ecosystems are essential to ensuring AI becomes a global common good. India’s approach, rooted in democratic values and digital public infrastructure, aims to make AI accessible to startups, researchers, and developing nations alike. By advocating transparency, interoperability, and responsible governance, the Prime Minister framed AI not merely as an economic opportunity but as a civilizational tool capable of advancing education, healthcare, agriculture, and climate resilience worldwide.

Emmanuel Macron — President of France

President Emmanuel Macron lauded India’s sweeping digital transformation, highlighting initiatives such as the “India Stack Open Interoperable Sovereign” framework as a new global benchmark for digital governance and innovation. He noted that India’s success in scaling digital public infrastructure across a vast population demonstrates how technology can be deployed inclusively while preserving sovereignty and security.

Macron emphasized that India’s interoperable systems—spanning identity, payments, and public service delivery—illustrate how nations can build resilient digital ecosystems without compromising openness. He suggested that such models could inspire other countries seeking to balance innovation with regulation. By praising India’s AI ambitions, Macron reinforced the importance of Franco-Indian collaboration in research, ethics, and talent mobility to shape a trustworthy and democratic AI future.

António Guterres — United Nations Secretary-General

The UN Secretary-General António Guterres underscored that Artificial Intelligence must function as a tool to augment human potential rather than undermine human dignity or employment stability. He stressed that AI governance should proactively address social inequality, economic disruption, misinformation, and environmental degradation.

Guterres called for robust global frameworks that ensure AI aligns with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). He highlighted the need for equitable access to AI technologies for developing nations and warned against regulatory fragmentation that could create technological divides. According to him, multilateral cooperation is crucial to ensure AI strengthens global solidarity, enhances disaster response systems, supports climate monitoring, and contributes meaningfully to sustainable growth.

Sam Altman — CEO, OpenAI

Sam Altman observed the rapid acceleration of AI adoption in India, noting that the country has become one of the fastest-growing markets for generative AI usage and innovation. He pointed out the vibrancy of India’s startup ecosystem and the scale at which Indian developers are experimenting with cutting-edge AI tools.

Altman emphasized that global collaboration is critical to AI’s safe and effective development. He encouraged policymakers and technologists to work together to establish safety standards, promote responsible deployment, and democratize access to powerful AI systems. He recognized India’s unique combination of technical talent, entrepreneurial culture, and policy innovation as a catalyst for shaping AI’s global trajectory.

Sundar Pichai — CEO, Google

Sundar Pichai praised India’s dynamic AI innovation ecosystem, calling it one of the most exciting growth hubs in the world. He reiterated Google’s commitment to building a full-stack AI hub in India, encompassing research, cloud infrastructure, startup incubation, and digital skilling initiatives.

Pichai highlighted how India’s scale enables real-world experimentation across languages, sectors, and demographics, making it an ideal environment for AI advancement. He stressed the importance of multilingual AI systems that reflect India’s linguistic diversity and ensure inclusive digital participation. By investing in local research and partnerships, Google aims to contribute to India’s long-term technological self-reliance while maintaining global collaboration.

Brad Smith — Vice Chair & President, Microsoft

Brad Smith outlined Microsoft’s plans for significant global AI investments, emphasizing India as a strategic anchor in expanding AI infrastructure and capacity. He highlighted initiatives to strengthen cloud infrastructure, cybersecurity frameworks, and AI training programs across Indian institutions.

Smith emphasized that expanding access to AI must go hand-in-hand with ethical governance. Microsoft’s approach integrates regulatory compliance, data protection safeguards, and workforce reskilling efforts to ensure responsible innovation. By anchoring major investments in India, Microsoft signals confidence in the country’s role as a global AI powerhouse and innovation partner.

Vinod Khosla — Technology Investor

Vinod Khosla encouraged India’s youth and entrepreneurs to transition from traditional service-based models to AI-driven product creation and deep-tech innovation. He stressed that the next wave of global value creation will come from original AI solutions rather than outsourced services.

Khosla urged policymakers to support risk-taking, research funding, and startup incubation ecosystems. He argued that India’s demographic dividend presents a rare opportunity to become a global AI innovation leader, provided it cultivates bold thinking and disruptive experimentation.

Blackstone — Global Investment Firm

Blackstone leadership announced substantial infrastructure investments aimed at strengthening India’s AI ecosystem. These investments include data centres, digital infrastructure, and technology parks designed to support AI research and deployment.

By committing long-term capital, Blackstone signalled confidence in India’s regulatory environment, talent pool, and digital growth trajectory. The firm highlighted the importance of scalable infrastructure in enabling AI innovation, particularly in areas such as cloud computing, financial services, and enterprise automation.

Anthropic — AI Company Executive

An executive from Anthropic announced the establishment of the company’s first India office in Bengaluru, marking a strategic expansion into one of the world’s most promising AI markets. This move reflects confidence in India’s research talent and developer ecosystem.

The company emphasized its commitment to responsible AI research, safety alignment, and partnerships with Indian academic and industrial institutions. By entering the Indian market, Anthropic aims to collaborate on frontier AI development while contributing to local innovation capacity.

Ashwini Vaishnaw — India’s Minister for Electronics & IT

Ashwini Vaishnaw highlighted the significance of a summit declaration endorsed by 86 nations promoting ethical, transparent, and accountable AI governance. He stressed that India is committed to shaping global standards that balance innovation with public interest safeguards.

Vaishnaw emphasized India’s leadership in digital public infrastructure and reiterated the country’s readiness to host collaborative research platforms. He framed the summit as a milestone in forging international consensus around trustworthy AI.

Shantanu Narayen & Kore.ai — Technology Leaders

Shantanu Narayen of Adobe and executives from Kore.ai emphasized India’s pivotal role in AI’s transformative agenda. They highlighted the country’s unique combination of creative talent, software engineering expertise, and entrepreneurial drive.

They noted that AI is reshaping industries—from digital content creation and enterprise automation to customer engagement platforms—and India stands at the centre of this transformation. Investments in AI skilling and research partnerships will further accelerate India’s emergence as a global innovation hub.

Rishi Sunak — Former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom

Rishi Sunak stated that India possesses the scale, governance capacity, and technological expertise to lead in global AI deployment and regulatory frameworks. He emphasized that India’s democratic institutions and vibrant tech sector position it uniquely to balance innovation with accountability.

Sunak highlighted the importance of international cooperation in preventing misuse while fostering growth. He suggested that India’s experience with digital public goods could inform global AI governance models, making it a central voice in shaping the future of responsible AI worldwide.

 

Major Investment Announcements

1. Reliance Industries — $110 Billion AI & Data Infrastructure Vision

Under the leadership of Mukesh Ambani, Reliance Industries announced an unprecedented $110 billion investment over seven years aimed at building gigawatt-scale data centres and next-generation AI infrastructure across India. This initiative is designed to position India among the world’s leading AI compute hubs.

The investment will focus on hyperscale data facilities powered increasingly by renewable energy, high-density GPU clusters, and sovereign cloud capabilities. By building infrastructure at gigawatt capacity, Reliance aims to support large-scale AI model training, enterprise cloud services, smart manufacturing systems, and nationwide digital platforms.

Strategically, this move aligns with India’s ambition to reduce dependence on foreign cloud providers while strengthening domestic computational sovereignty. The plan also includes fibre backbone expansion, 5G/6G integration, and edge AI deployment for sectors such as healthcare diagnostics, precision agriculture, financial inclusion, and smart cities.

Jio Platforms & Energy Compute Network — ₹10 Lakh Crore Nationwide AI Compute

Reliance Jio, in collaboration with the Energy Compute Network initiative, unveiled a staggering ₹10 lakh crore investment plan to establish a nationwide AI compute grid and edge-services ecosystem. This program envisions distributed compute clusters integrated with telecom towers, renewable energy grids, and urban digital corridors.

The initiative seeks to democratize AI access by bringing compute power closer to end-users through edge nodes deployed in tier-2 and tier-3 cities. Such distributed infrastructure will reduce latency, improve real-time analytics, and enable localized AI applications in language processing, logistics, retail automation, and telemedicine.

This nationwide AI backbone is expected to catalyse startup innovation, create thousands of high-skilled jobs, and strengthen India’s position in real-time data-driven industries.

Adani Group — $100 Billion Hyperscale AI Data Centres by 2035

The Adani Group pledged $100 billion in AI infrastructure investment by 2035, with a focus on hyperscale data centres powered by green energy. Leveraging its expertise in energy generation, ports, and logistics, the conglomerate aims to integrate sustainable power solutions directly into AI compute infrastructure.

The project envisions multi-gigawatt data parks capable of hosting global AI firms and cloud service providers. Emphasis will be placed on energy efficiency, liquid cooling technologies, and carbon-neutral operations. By merging renewable energy capacity with AI infrastructure, the Adani Group aims to redefine sustainable digital industrialization in emerging economies.

Tata Group & OpenAI — 100 MW to 1 GW AI Infrastructure

The Tata Group announced a landmark collaboration with OpenAI to establish a 100-megawatt AI infrastructure facility scalable to 1 gigawatt. This phased development will support enterprise-grade AI solutions for banking, manufacturing, healthcare, and public services.

The partnership also includes joint enterprise AI initiatives, focusing on responsible AI deployment, workforce training, and industrial automation. Tata’s diversified ecosystem—from IT services to steel and automotive manufacturing—provides fertile ground for real-world AI experimentation and scaled implementation.

By combining OpenAI’s research leadership with Tata’s industrial depth, this collaboration aims to accelerate India’s transformation into a global AI innovation and deployment hub.

Microsoft — $50 Billion Global AI Expansion

Microsoft announced a $50 billion global AI equity and infrastructure expansion, with particular emphasis on emerging and lower-income regions, including India. This investment includes new data centres, AI supercomputing clusters, cybersecurity reinforcement, and digital skilling initiatives.

A substantial portion will support localized AI services, cloud accessibility for startups, and partnerships with educational institutions. Microsoft’s strategy aims to bridge the global AI divide by expanding compute accessibility beyond developed markets.

The initiative underscores Microsoft’s long-term commitment to inclusive growth, sustainable AI deployment, and regulatory compliance frameworks aligned with democratic governance principles.

Blackstone — Capital Deployment in GPU & Data Systems

Blackstone announced significant capital deployment targeting AI GPU infrastructure and next-generation data centre systems. The firm is investing in facilities optimized for high-performance computing, advanced cooling systems, and modular data architectures.

By financing large-scale GPU clusters, Blackstone is enabling AI startups and multinational corporations to access robust training environments. The investment reflects confidence in India’s regulatory stability and demand growth for enterprise AI solutions.

Advanced Micro Devices & Tata Consultancy Services — Helios AI Hardware Ecosystem

AMD and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) announced a partnership to expand India’s AI hardware ecosystem through the Helios infrastructure initiative. The collaboration aims to integrate advanced AI accelerators, high-performance processors, and custom silicon solutions tailored for enterprise workloads.

This partnership strengthens India’s semiconductor and hardware capabilities, reducing reliance on imports while boosting domestic design and testing capacity. By merging AMD’s chip innovation with TCS’s enterprise deployment expertise, the initiative seeks to create scalable AI-ready infrastructure for financial services, telecom, and government applications.

Google — Full-Stack AI Hub in Visakhapatnam

Under the leadership of Sundar Pichai, Google announced the development of a full-stack AI hub in Visakhapatnam. The facility will integrate research labs, data centres, startup incubation spaces, and AI skilling programs.

This hub aims to serve as a collaborative innovation zone linking academia, startups, and global enterprises. It will focus on multilingual AI systems, responsible AI governance research, and cloud-based AI service expansion. The project reinforces India’s role as a strategic AI growth engine in the Indo-Pacific region.

Andhra Pradesh — Quantum-AI & Skill Ecosystem MoUs

The Government of Andhra Pradesh signed multiple Memoranda of Understanding focused on quantum-AI hybrid systems, advanced research clusters, and AI skill ecosystems. These agreements aim to integrate quantum computing research with AI-driven analytics for defence, healthcare, and smart governance applications.

The state also plans to establish AI training academies, university partnerships, and incubation centres to nurture talent pipelines. This regional strategy positions Andhra Pradesh as a nucleus for next-generation computational research in India.

Government-Backed Venture Capital AI Fund — $1.1 Billion Multistage Support

The Indian government announced a $1.1 billion multistage AI and advanced manufacturing venture fund designed to support startups from seed to growth stages. The fund targets deep-tech innovation in robotics, AI chips, autonomous systems, and industrial automation.

Structured to crowd-in private capital, the fund aims to reduce early-stage risk barriers and stimulate domestic intellectual property creation. This initiative marks a decisive shift toward product-based innovation and long-term capital formation in India’s AI ecosystem.

Peak XV Partners & C2i — $15 Million Series A

Peak XV and C2i secured a $15 million Series A investment focused on AI power systems for data centres. The funding will enhance energy optimization technologies, cooling efficiency, and smart power management for high-density GPU environments.

This investment addresses one of AI infrastructure’s critical bottlenecks: sustainable and efficient energy consumption. By improving power distribution and operational efficiency, the initiative supports scalable AI deployment while minimizing environmental impact.

Anthropic (Claude) — Strategic Expansion in India

Anthropic, developer of the Claude AI system, announced expansion investments reinforcing India’s position as its second-largest global market. The company plans to scale research partnerships, enterprise solutions, and localized AI services.

This expansion includes talent acquisition, developer outreach programs, and compliance frameworks tailored to India’s regulatory environment. By strengthening its Indian footprint, Anthropic aims to contribute to safe and aligned AI development while participating actively in one of the world’s fastest-growing AI ecosystems.

Strategic Alliances / Joint Ventures Announced

India & Pax Silica Declaration — Strategic Technology Cooperation

India entered into a landmark strategic understanding under the Pax Silica Declaration, aimed at strengthening cooperation in AI infrastructure, semiconductor manufacturing, and resilient technology supply chains. This declaration envisions a long-term framework for collaboration in advanced chip fabrication, AI accelerators, rare-earth supply security, and next-generation compute architecture.

The partnership seeks to reduce vulnerabilities in global semiconductor supply chains by promoting diversified sourcing, trusted manufacturing ecosystems, and joint R&D initiatives. It also emphasizes co-investment in AI-ready data centres, cross-border technology standards alignment, and secure digital trade corridors.

Strategically, the declaration positions India as a central node in trusted global tech networks while enhancing self-reliance in critical digital infrastructure. The focus on semiconductor resilience underscores the growing recognition that AI competitiveness is inseparable from hardware sovereignty and secure production ecosystems.

Tata Group × OpenAI Alliance — Enterprise AI & Infrastructure

The Tata Group and OpenAI formalized a strategic alliance to co-develop enterprise AI infrastructure and deploy advanced AI solutions across industries. This collaboration extends beyond compute facilities into sector-specific innovation, including intelligent manufacturing systems, AI-powered financial analytics, healthcare diagnostics, and smart mobility platforms.

The alliance aims to blend OpenAI’s frontier AI research with Tata’s industrial scale and operational reach. Joint innovation labs will focus on responsible AI deployment, regulatory compliance, and real-world enterprise integration.

This partnership exemplifies how global AI pioneers and diversified industrial conglomerates can combine strengths to accelerate digital transformation while embedding governance safeguards into AI implementation.

Tata Consultancy Services × Advanced Micro Devices — Rack-Scale AI Compute Co-Development

Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and AMD announced a collaboration to co-develop rack-scale AI compute hardware within India. The initiative focuses on integrating high-performance CPUs, GPUs, and custom accelerators into scalable rack-level systems optimized for AI model training and inference workloads.

By localizing advanced hardware design and system integration, the alliance strengthens India’s semiconductor value chain and reduces dependence on imported compute modules. It also encourages co-innovation in cooling systems, energy optimization, and modular data-centre architecture.

This collaboration represents a critical step toward building domestic AI supercomputing capability, positioning India as not just a software powerhouse but a hardware innovation leader.

Anthropic — India Joint Operations & Market Partnerships

Anthropic announced the launch of joint operations in India, including the opening of local offices and the establishment of market partnerships with enterprises and research institutions. This move signals a long-term commitment to India as a key innovation and deployment hub.

The collaboration framework includes developer engagement programs, co-research initiatives with universities, and enterprise partnerships for safe AI deployment. By embedding itself within India’s innovation ecosystem, Anthropic aims to align product development with local needs while upholding global AI safety standards.

Such localized partnerships enhance knowledge transfer, talent development, and contextual AI adaptation for multilingual and sector-specific applications.

Google India Full-Stack Hub — Industry Collaboration Platform

Google’s full-stack AI hub initiative in India is structured as a collaborative platform linking global research teams with Indian startups, universities, and industry leaders. Under the leadership of Sundar Pichai, this hub aims to accelerate AI development across the entire technology stack—from silicon to cloud to application layers.

The collaboration includes joint research grants, startup incubation programs, and open-source AI model contributions tailored for Indian languages and use cases. By fostering a multi-stakeholder ecosystem, Google’s initiative enhances innovation velocity while ensuring AI accessibility and inclusivity.

Andhra Pradesh Government × Global Tech MoUs — AI & Quantum Alliances

The Government of Andhra Pradesh signed multiple MoUs with global technology firms and research institutions focusing on AI and quantum computing convergence. These agreements aim to establish research clusters, quantum-AI hybrid labs, and skill development centres.

The alliances include collaborative pilot projects in smart governance, predictive healthcare analytics, logistics optimization, and defense technologies. By integrating quantum research capabilities with AI systems, the state aspires to position itself at the forefront of next-generation computational breakthroughs.

These MoUs reflect a regional strategy that aligns public-sector ambition with global private-sector expertise.

86-Country AI Governance Declaration — Multilateral Principles Framework

Eighty-six nations collectively endorsed a shared declaration promoting ethical, transparent, and accountable AI governance. This multilateral framework establishes guiding principles around safety testing, bias mitigation, data protection, and equitable access.

The declaration encourages cross-border regulatory harmonization to prevent fragmentation and promote innovation within trusted guardrails. Participating countries committed to ongoing dialogue, joint policy research, and knowledge exchange to address emerging AI risks.

This alliance marks one of the most comprehensive international efforts to shape AI governance collaboratively rather than competitively.

Global Startup & Innovation Networks — Cross-Border Ecosystem Integration

Strategic partnerships were announced linking Indian startup hubs with global incubators and innovation networks across North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific. These cross-border alliances enable Indian AI startups to access international mentorship, funding channels, and global markets.

Reciprocally, global startups gain entry into India’s vast user base, diverse linguistic landscape, and rapidly expanding digital economy. This bidirectional flow of ideas and capital strengthens India’s integration into global innovation supply chains.

The alliances foster collaborative R&D, co-creation programs, and shared accelerator platforms to accelerate commercialization timelines.

AI Skilling & Education Partnerships — Academia-Industry Integration

New agreements between AI companies, universities, and vocational training institutions aim to expand AI literacy and advanced technical training. These partnerships focus on curriculum modernization, research fellowships, faculty exchange programs, and industry-aligned certification courses.

The alliances seek to bridge the skills gap by equipping students with expertise in machine learning, data science, robotics, and semiconductor design. By aligning education systems with industry demand, these partnerships ensure a steady pipeline of AI-ready professionals.

Such collaborations reinforce India’s demographic advantage and strengthen long-term workforce competitiveness.

AI Safety & Ethical Framework Consortiums — Responsible Innovation Networks

Multiple consortiums were formed to advance AI safety research and ethical governance frameworks. These collaborative platforms bring together policymakers, technology firms, civil society groups, and academic experts to address bias, explainability, model alignment, and cybersecurity threats.

The alliances aim to create shared testing standards, red-teaming protocols, and transparency guidelines. By institutionalizing responsible AI governance, these initiatives seek to build public trust while fostering innovation.

This multi-stakeholder model reflects the recognition that AI safety is a collective responsibility requiring cross-sector coordination.

International AI Research Collaboratives — Foundational Systems Research

New international research collaboratives were launched to develop foundational AI systems, large language models, and domain-specific AI platforms. These alliances facilitate joint funding mechanisms, shared datasets, and open research exchanges.

Participating institutions aim to accelerate breakthroughs in multimodal AI, climate modelling, advanced robotics, and biomedical analytics. By pooling global expertise, these research platforms reduce duplication and enhance scientific rigor.

The collaborative model supports transparent knowledge-sharing while maintaining intellectual property protections.

Public-Private AI Deployment Partnerships — Sectoral Transformation

Government-backed alliances with private technology providers were announced to deploy AI solutions in healthcare, agriculture, logistics, education, and disaster management. These public-private partnerships focus on real-world implementation, ensuring AI delivers measurable social and economic impact.

Examples include AI-driven crop yield prediction systems, predictive healthcare diagnostics in rural areas, traffic optimization platforms in urban centres, and AI-enabled disaster early warning systems.

By combining regulatory authority with technological innovation, these partnerships ensure scalable deployment while maintaining accountability and data governance standards.

Key Outcomes of the Summit

India Hosted the First Global South–Led AI Summit with Broad Global Participation

One of the most historic outcomes of the summit was India’s successful hosting of the first major AI summit led by a Global South nation, marking a significant shift in the geography of global technology governance. Traditionally, AI policy discourse has been dominated by North America, Europe, and East Asia. This summit symbolized a rebalancing of that dynamic, bringing emerging economies into the centre of AI decision-making.

Delegations from advanced economies, developing nations, multilateral organizations, global technology firms, academic institutions, and civil society groups participated. The event demonstrated India’s ability to convene diverse geopolitical blocs around a shared AI agenda.

By placing Global South priorities—such as equitable access, affordability, linguistic diversity, digital public goods, and climate resilience—at the forefront, the summit reframed AI from being merely a frontier technology race to a development accelerator. This milestone elevated India’s diplomatic standing as a bridge between developed and developing nations in shaping inclusive AI governance.

Launch of Sovereign AI Models Including Multilingual and Multimodal Systems

A landmark outcome was the launch and announcement of sovereign AI models designed to operate across multiple Indian languages and modalities (text, speech, image, and video). These systems are built to address India’s linguistic diversity, ensuring accessibility beyond English-speaking populations.

The sovereign AI initiative emphasizes data localization, security, and cultural contextualization. By training models on regionally representative datasets, developers aim to reduce bias and improve contextual understanding in public service delivery, healthcare communication, agricultural advisories, and educational tools.

Multimodal capabilities further expand utility—enabling voice-based governance services, AI-driven telemedicine diagnostics, real-time translation, and inclusive digital learning. This marks a strategic shift toward AI systems that reflect local needs while maintaining global competitiveness.

Over $250 Billion in Infrastructure and AI Industry Commitments

The summit catalysed more than $250 billion in combined infrastructure and AI industry investment commitments, spanning hyperscale data centres, semiconductor manufacturing, GPU clusters, renewable-powered computing facilities, and AI research hubs.

These commitments include public and private capital across telecom operators, conglomerates, semiconductor firms, venture funds, and global technology giants. The scale of pledged capital signals strong confidence in India’s regulatory framework, talent pool, and digital growth trajectory.

Such investment volume positions India among the top destinations for AI infrastructure expansion globally. Beyond immediate economic impact, the commitments are expected to generate employment, stimulate ancillary industries (energy, cooling systems, fibre optics), and accelerate domestic AI innovation ecosystems.

Endorsement of AI Governance Declaration by 86 Countries

Eighty-six countries formally endorsed a shared AI governance declaration during the summit, marking one of the largest multilateral agreements on AI principles to date. The declaration emphasizes safety, accountability, transparency, fairness, and inclusivity in AI system development and deployment.

Participating nations committed to collaborative policy research, harmonized safety standards, and cross-border dialogue mechanisms to manage emerging risks. The framework aims to prevent regulatory fragmentation while fostering innovation within responsible guardrails.

This broad endorsement strengthens India’s diplomatic leadership in shaping global AI norms and demonstrates growing consensus around the need for cooperative AI governance.

Guinness World Record for AI Responsibility Pledges

The summit achieved a Guinness World Record for the highest number of AI responsibility pledges, symbolizing widespread institutional commitment to ethical AI practices. Governments, corporations, startups, and academic institutions collectively signed pledges addressing transparency, bias mitigation, data protection, and responsible deployment.

While symbolic, the record underscores a deeper shift: AI ethics is no longer a peripheral discussion but a mainstream commitment embedded within policy and corporate strategy. The collective pledge enhances public trust and reinforces the summit’s theme of responsible innovation.

Strengthened Global AI Partnership Frameworks (Including Pax Silica–Type Cooperation)

The summit reinforced strategic frameworks such as the Pax Silica–style cooperation model, aimed at enhancing semiconductor supply chains, AI infrastructure collaboration, and technology security. These frameworks prioritize trusted partnerships, diversified manufacturing ecosystems, and secure digital trade corridors.

By formalizing cooperation in hardware, software, and research ecosystems, participating nations signalled their commitment to building resilient and transparent AI value chains. This reduces geopolitical vulnerabilities and strengthens technological sovereignty among allied partners.

Major Technology and Infrastructure Investments from Global Companies

Leading global technology firms and investment groups announced substantial India-focused investments in data centres, AI research labs, startup incubation programs, and cloud expansion projects. These announcements reflect confidence in India’s market potential and regulatory clarity.

The influx of foreign direct investment is expected to accelerate technology transfer, create advanced research opportunities, and deepen India’s integration into global AI supply chains. It also reinforces the perception of India as a stable and attractive destination for long-term AI capital deployment.

Formalization of Strategic Alliances and Joint Ventures

Numerous strategic alliances and joint ventures were formalized during the summit, connecting Indian firms with global AI leaders, semiconductor manufacturers, academic institutions, and venture capital networks.

These partnerships span hardware co-development, enterprise AI integration, multilingual model research, safety testing frameworks, and skill development initiatives. By institutionalizing these collaborations, the summit transformed high-level dialogue into actionable implementation pathways.

The formal agreements ensure continuity beyond the summit, translating policy vision into measurable outcomes and sustained collaboration.

Increased Focus on Real-World AI Applications

A central theme emerging from the summit was the emphasis on practical AI deployment rather than abstract technological development. Pilot programs and partnership announcements targeted sectors such as healthcare diagnostics, agricultural yield prediction, climate modelling, disaster response, fintech inclusion, and smart mobility.

This applied orientation ensures that AI investments deliver tangible social and economic benefits. It also demonstrates India’s approach of leveraging AI as a development multiplier rather than solely as a frontier research endeavour.

Vision for India as a Global AI Innovation Hub

The summit articulated a long-term vision positioning India as a global AI innovation and deployment hub. This vision integrates infrastructure scale, startup dynamism, research excellence, and digital public infrastructure into a cohesive national strategy.

India’s demographic advantage—combined with robust engineering talent and a thriving startup ecosystem—provides fertile ground for AI entrepreneurship. The summit reinforced India’s aspiration to become not just a consumer of AI technologies but a producer and exporter of AI solutions.

Boost to India-Focused AI Research and Education Ecosystem

New research grants, academic partnerships, and skilling programs were announced to strengthen India’s AI education and innovation capacity. Universities will collaborate with industry leaders on curriculum modernization, joint labs, and doctoral fellowships.

These initiatives aim to close the AI skills gap while fostering original intellectual property creation. By aligning academia with industry needs, India is building a sustainable talent pipeline to support long-term AI leadership.

Recognition of India’s Digital Public Infrastructure as a Strategic Advantage

A defining outcome of the summit was widespread recognition of India’s digital public infrastructure—often referred to as India Stack—as a foundational advantage in scaling AI adoption. The interoperability of digital identity, payments, and service delivery systems creates a ready-made platform for AI integration.

This infrastructure enables rapid experimentation, large-scale data-driven insights, and efficient service deployment. International participants acknowledged that India’s DPI model provides a replicable template for emerging economies seeking inclusive digital transformation.

By leveraging this strategic asset, India can accelerate AI deployment while ensuring accessibility, transparency, and scalability.

Developments Relating to AI in India

1. Unveiling of Sovereign AI Models: Multilingual & Multimodal Systems

India unveiled multiple sovereign AI systems, including large language models (LLMs) and multimodal platforms designed specifically for Indian linguistic and cultural contexts. These models are trained on regionally diverse datasets to ensure contextual accuracy across India’s vast spectrum of languages, dialects, and socio-economic realities.

Unlike generic global models, sovereign AI systems prioritize data localization, transparency, and alignment with national regulatory frameworks. Their multilingual capability supports governance communication, rural advisory systems, and educational tools in vernacular languages, bridging the digital divide.

Multimodal functionality—integrating text, speech, image, and video—further enables inclusive access. Citizens can interact with public services through voice interfaces, receive AI-assisted telemedicine diagnostics, and access educational content in localized formats. This development represents a strategic pivot toward technological self-reliance while maintaining global interoperability.

Sarvam AI — Advanced LLMs & Physical AI Innovation

Sarvam AI emerged as a flagship example of India’s private-sector AI innovation, launching advanced large language models tailored for Indian enterprises and consumers. These LLMs focus on multilingual comprehension, industry-specific customization, and cost-efficient deployment for domestic markets.

Beyond software, Sarvam AI introduced physical AI applications such as AI-enabled smart glasses, signalling India’s transition from purely digital AI systems to embodied intelligence solutions. These devices integrate computer vision, speech processing, and contextual analytics for enterprise and consumer use.

The company’s rapid development cycle demonstrates the dynamism of India’s AI startup ecosystem, reflecting investor confidence and strong domestic talent pools.

BharatGen Param2 — Government-Backed Multilingual Foundational Model

The BharatGen Param2 initiative represents a state-supported effort to build a foundational multilingual AI model tailored to Indian requirements. Designed to serve as a core infrastructure layer, Param2 supports government departments, research institutions, startups, and public service platforms.

By providing an open and scalable base model, the initiative lowers entry barriers for innovators who can fine-tune the system for sector-specific applications. The model emphasizes fairness, bias mitigation, and linguistic inclusivity.

Param2 reflects India’s strategic emphasis on public digital goods, ensuring foundational AI capabilities remain accessible rather than monopolized.

Qualcomm — Humanoid Robotics & Physical Automation

Qualcomm’s humanoid robotics demonstrations highlighted a new frontier for AI in India: the integration of advanced AI systems into physical automation platforms. These showcases underscored AI’s expanding role in robotics, edge computing, and real-time sensor integration.

Humanoid robotics applications include industrial automation, healthcare assistance, warehouse logistics, and service delivery. The demonstrations reflect a shift from purely cognitive AI systems toward embodied AI capable of interacting with physical environments.

This development aligns with India’s manufacturing ambitions and signals future integration between AI software ecosystems and hardware automation technologies.

Rapid Expansion of the AI Startup Ecosystem

India’s AI startup ecosystem has experienced accelerated growth, marked by new funding rounds, global partnerships, regional expansion, and the opening of international offices. Startups are increasingly focusing on language-specific AI tools, enterprise automation solutions, fintech analytics, agritech intelligence, and climate modelling platforms.

The ecosystem benefits from a strong engineering workforce, competitive operational costs, and increasing venture capital interest. International AI companies establishing Indian offices further integrate local startups into global innovation supply chains.

This vibrant entrepreneurial landscape positions India as one of the fastest-growing AI innovation markets globally.

Real-World AI Applications Across Sectors

AI deployment in India has moved decisively into real-world pilot programs and scalable implementations. In healthcare, AI-powered diagnostic tools assist in early disease detection and remote patient monitoring. In agriculture, predictive analytics guide crop selection, irrigation optimization, and pest management strategies.

In education, AI-driven adaptive learning platforms personalize instruction based on student performance. These pilots demonstrate AI’s tangible social and economic benefits, reinforcing the view of AI as a developmental multiplier rather than a purely commercial tool.

The emphasis on real-world outcomes ensures measurable impact and builds public trust in AI technologies.

Expansion of AI GPU Infrastructure via IndiaAI Compute Portal

The IndiaAI Compute Portal initiative has significantly expanded GPU infrastructure access for startups, researchers, and public institutions. By pooling national compute resources, the portal democratizes high-performance AI training capabilities.

This infrastructure enables advanced model development without prohibitive capital expenditure, supporting domestic innovation and academic research. The portal also encourages collaborative research projects and optimized compute allocation for national priorities.

The expansion of GPU capacity strengthens India’s competitiveness in training large-scale AI models.

Guinness World Record for Responsible AI Pledges

The nationwide “AI responsibility pledges” campaign achieved a Guinness World Record, reflecting widespread institutional commitment to ethical AI practices. Thousands of participants—including students, companies, and public bodies—pledged adherence to transparency, fairness, and accountability principles.

This initiative symbolizes India’s proactive approach to embedding ethics within technological growth. By integrating responsibility into AI culture early, India aims to prevent misuse and strengthen global credibility.

Growth in AI Academic & Skilling Programs

Universities and technical institutes across India have launched new AI-focused degree programs, research labs, and interdisciplinary initiatives. Partnerships with industry provide internships, joint research grants, and curriculum modernization aligned with global standards.

Skilling initiatives extend beyond elite institutions to vocational centers and online learning platforms, ensuring widespread AI literacy. These programs prepare India’s workforce for emerging roles in machine learning engineering, data science, AI ethics, and robotics integration.

The expansion of education infrastructure ensures long-term sustainability of India’s AI ambitions.

Shift from Pilot Projects to Large-Scale AI Deployment

Indian industries are transitioning from experimental AI pilots to full-scale deployment across supply chains, customer service systems, manufacturing automation, and financial analytics. This transition reflects growing confidence in AI’s return on investment and operational reliability.

Enterprises increasingly integrate AI into core business processes rather than treating it as an auxiliary technology. This industrial-scale adoption marks a maturation of India’s AI landscape.

Way Forward for India: A Comprehensive Strategic Roadmap for AI Leadership

India stands at a defining moment in its technological evolution. With strong digital public infrastructure, a vast talent pool, and growing global confidence, the country has the opportunity to emerge as a leading AI powerhouse. However, realizing this vision requires deliberate, long-term, and multi-layered action. Below is a significantly expanded roadmap outlining ten strategic priorities for India’s AI-driven future.

Build Sovereign AI Infrastructure with Scalable Compute

For India to achieve technological self-reliance in artificial intelligence, it must prioritize sovereign AI infrastructure at scale. This involves developing hyperscale data centres, high-performance GPU clusters, domestic semiconductor fabrication capabilities, and secure cloud platforms designed to host and train advanced AI models.

Scalable compute capacity is foundational to AI competitiveness. Without adequate processing power, India risks dependency on foreign infrastructure for model training and deployment. Sovereign infrastructure ensures data localization, national security compliance, and policy alignment with domestic regulations.

Key steps include:

  • Establishing national AI supercomputing hubs.
  • Incentivizing domestic chip design and fabrication ecosystems.
  • Integrating renewable energy sources to power AI data centres sustainably.
  • Expanding high-speed fibre connectivity to support distributed AI compute networks.

A sovereign compute backbone will empower startups, researchers, and enterprises to innovate independently while strengthening India’s digital sovereignty.

Expand Skilling & Reskilling Nationwide for AI Jobs

AI transformation will reshape the labour market across industries. India must proactively invest in nationwide skilling and reskilling initiatives to prepare its workforce for AI-driven roles.

This includes:

  • Introducing AI literacy programs at school levels.
  • Expanding university-level AI, robotics, and data science curricula.
  • Offering vocational certifications for mid-career professionals transitioning into AI-related domains.
  • Creating accessible online platforms for remote learning in rural and semi-urban regions.

Reskilling is particularly important in sectors where automation may disrupt traditional roles. By equipping workers with complementary skills—such as AI system management, human-machine collaboration, and data interpretation—India can convert potential displacement into opportunity.

A coordinated effort involving government, industry, and academic institutions will ensure a continuous pipeline of AI-ready professionals.

Promote Inclusive AI Ecosystems Across Sectors

India’s AI strategy must prioritize inclusivity to ensure equitable access and benefits. AI solutions should address linguistic diversity, rural connectivity gaps, gender disparities, and socio-economic inequalities.

Inclusive AI ecosystems require:

  • Multilingual AI tools for public service access.
  • Affordable AI-powered devices and platforms.
  • Targeted funding for rural and grassroots AI innovations.
  • Incentives for startups working in social impact sectors.

Sectoral diversity is equally critical. AI development should not be confined to urban fintech or e-commerce sectors but extended to agriculture, small-scale manufacturing, public health, and education.

An inclusive ecosystem strengthens social cohesion and ensures that AI becomes a democratizing force rather than a source of inequality.

Strengthen AI Research & Innovation Networks

To remain globally competitive, India must invest heavily in foundational AI research. This involves establishing interdisciplinary research clusters connecting universities, startups, think tanks, and industry leaders.

Key priorities include:

  • Funding high-risk, high-reward AI research.
  • Creating shared research infrastructure and datasets.
  • Encouraging doctoral fellowships and postdoctoral programs in AI domains.
  • Supporting public research institutions in developing indigenous AI frameworks.

International research collaboration should complement domestic innovation while safeguarding intellectual property. By building strong innovation networks, India can transition from being primarily a technology adopter to a global AI knowledge creator.

Advocate Ethical AI Governance Globally

India has the opportunity to shape global AI governance by promoting ethical, transparent, and human-centric principles. As a democratic nation with experience in digital public goods, India can champion balanced regulation that encourages innovation while protecting citizens.

This includes:

  • Participating in multilateral AI policy forums.
  • Advocating harmonized safety standards.
  • Promoting bias mitigation and accountability frameworks.
  • Ensuring privacy protection and cybersecurity safeguards.

Global advocacy strengthens India’s diplomatic influence while aligning technological growth with constitutional values and human rights.

Encourage Open-Source & Cross-Border Collaboration

Open-source ecosystems accelerate innovation and democratize access to AI tools. India should actively support open-source AI frameworks, community-driven model development, and transparent research practices.

Cross-border collaboration enhances knowledge exchange and technological advancement. Partnerships with global research labs, multinational corporations, and emerging tech hubs can stimulate joint development initiatives.

Encouraging collaborative innovation reduces duplication of effort, fosters global trust, and integrates India more deeply into international AI value chains.

Support Startups with Venture Capital & Incubation

India’s AI startup ecosystem requires sustained financial and institutional support. Access to early-stage capital, incubation infrastructure, and regulatory clarity is essential for scaling innovation.

Policy interventions may include:

  • Expanding government-backed venture funds.
  • Offering tax incentives for AI R&D.
  • Creating AI-focused incubators in tier-2 and tier-3 cities.
  • Facilitating global market access for Indian AI startups.

A vibrant startup ecosystem fuels competition, drives job creation, and ensures continuous innovation across multiple AI verticals.

Integrate AI into Traditional Industries

AI integration must extend beyond technology firms into traditional industries such as agriculture, healthcare, manufacturing, logistics, and infrastructure.

Examples of sectoral integration include:

  • AI-powered crop monitoring and climate forecasting in agriculture.
  • Predictive diagnostics and telemedicine systems in healthcare.
  • Intelligent automation in manufacturing supply chains.
  • Smart traffic management and urban planning tools in infrastructure.

By embedding AI into core economic sectors, India can boost productivity, reduce waste, and improve service delivery across the economy.

Facilitate Public-Private Partnerships for Deployment

Public-private partnerships (PPPs) provide a scalable pathway for AI deployment. Government institutions offer regulatory authority and access to public datasets, while private companies contribute technological expertise and capital investment.

Successful PPP models can support:

  • Smart city initiatives.
  • Disaster early-warning systems.
  • Public health analytics platforms.
  • Digital agriculture advisories.

Transparent governance frameworks, clear contractual guidelines, and accountability mechanisms are crucial to ensure responsible deployment.

Strengthen AI Deployment in Government Services & Social Development

AI can transform governance by enabling evidence-based policymaking, efficient service delivery, and real-time monitoring systems. Integrating AI into government functions can enhance transparency, reduce corruption, and improve citizen engagement.

Potential applications include:

  • AI-based fraud detection in welfare schemes.
  • Automated grievance redressal systems.
  • Predictive analytics for infrastructure planning.
  • Targeted social benefit distribution using data insights.

When deployed responsibly, AI can significantly enhance social development outcomes, especially in healthcare, education, and rural welfare.

 

Conclusion

India’s emergence as an AI powerhouse is not merely an economic shift but a geopolitical statement of self-reliance. By leveraging its unique scale and engineering talent, the nation is building an ecosystem rooted in sovereign capacity and inclusive growth. The transition from a service-based technology model to original deep-tech product creation marks a new era for Indian entrepreneurship. However, the journey ahead will require sustained efforts in green energy for data centres and extensive workforce reskilling.

If the current investment commitments translate into successful execution, India may well define the next decade of the global technology story. As a bridge between major global powers and the Global South, New Delhi is uniquely positioned to harmonize innovation with accountability. The New Delhi summit was not a final destination, but a starting signal for a more collaborative and responsible AI future. In a fragmented world, India’s "human-centric" AI model offers a compelling template for shared global prosperity.