Dr. Ashwani Kumar
The future of Artificial intelligence (AI) in India will not be decided by machines alone but it will shape by their people, institutions and the decisions we make today. In India, artificial intelligence (AI) appears to be a game-changer that could affect how we learn, think, farm, diagnose illnesses, manage businesses, provide public services, and address common problems on a massive scale. India’s diversity has a significant impact on the country’s AI development process. AI systems go beyond efficiency advantages when they are purposefully designed for real-world scenarios, such as multilingual classrooms, smallholder farms, demanding healthcare settings, crowded metropolitan settings, and first-time digital users. In these situations, AI develops as a means for widespread access, allowing involvement across linguistic and socioeconomic divides.In India, artificial intelligence (AI) appears to be a game-changer that could affect how we learn, think, farm, diagnose illnesses, manage businesses, provide public services, and address common problems on a massive scale. India’s diversity has a significant impact on the country’s AI development process.
Essentially, more robust, inclusive, and context-aware technology innovation is shaped by the limitations themselves.AI has a significant impact on education. AI-powered learning aids will probably become commonplace in the near future, assisting students in reviewing subjects in the language of their choice, simplifying difficult concepts, and offering assistance when needed. AI may handle tedious chores for teachers, such as developing exercises, grading homework, and identifying areas in which students are falling behind. Their workload may be greatly reduced as a result. But AI shouldn’t be used in education to take the role of instructors. Rather, it should allow them more time and room to concentrate on what really counts, which is mentoring, motivating, and comprehending pupils in ways that technology cannot match.
When AI is used carefully and properly, healthcare stands to benefit greatly. AI systems can help doctors in situations when access to specialized treatment is limited by spotting odd patterns in scans, facilitating early diagnosis, simplifying patient data, and expanding care through telemedicine to disadvantaged areas. Nevertheless, a doctor’s knowledge, moral obligation, and interpersonal relationships with patients cannot be replaced by AI. Rather, it should be seen as a trustworthy support system—a second set of eyes that can improve decision-making, especially in settings where resources are scarce and healthcare personnel are under pressure.
Millions of people rely on agriculture for their livelihoods, and AI has the ability to significantly and steadily enhance this industry. Farmers can choose the best time to sow, recognize early indicators of crop stress, better understand weather patterns, and manage resources more effectively through enhanced supply chains with the aid of AI-based solutions. Even modest improvements, like prompt guidance, precise weather forecasts, or improved access to market data, can have a big impact on small-scale farmers’ output and earnings. In this sense, AI not only increases farming productivity but also supports sustainable farming methods and better decision-making.
“AI’s promise for India is human-centric empowerment over automation. By investing in talent, trust, and inclusivity, India can utilize AI to revolutionize essential services, from farming and medicine to entrepreneurship and education.”
The real impact of AI in India will be measured not in boardrooms, but in how deeply it reaches rural communities and everyday life. While industries and start-ups are rapidly adopting AI across different sectors like finance, logistics, retail, and customer service, India’s true advantage lies in its strong software talent and digital infrastructure, which can support scalable, practical solutions.The most meaningful breakthroughs may not be flashy innovations, but solutions to routine challenges—slow paperwork, inefficient transport systems, weak demand planning, and limited access to essential services.At the same time, it’s important to stay realistic. Like any major technological shift, AI brings uncertainty. Concerns about job loss are valid, as some repetitive roles will evolve or disappear. However, history suggests that new opportunities, industries, and skill requirements will also emerge. The key challenge is whether India can reskill its workforce quickly enough. Expanding digital literacy and access to affordable, high-quality training will determine whether AI reduces inequality or deepens it.Ethical concerns also demand attention. AI reflects the data and intentions behind it—biased data can lead to unfair outcomes, unchecked surveillance can weaken trust, and careless handling of personal data can harm individuals. Responsible development will be crucial.
From the outset, India’s AI journey must strike a balance between innovation and accountability. This entails incorporating human oversight, industry-specific regulations, defined standards, and robust data protection into the system rather than responding to issues as they emerge. Inclusion of language is equally important. AI in India cannot continue to be restricted to a minority of English speakers. It must respect cultural context and daily demands while efficiently comprehending and serving customers in a variety of languages, including Hindi, Tamil, Bengali, Marathi, Telugu, Urdu, Punjabi, and many more. When AI is developed in this manner, it can facilitate greater digital involvement, increase legal awareness, better interaction with government processes, and expand access to knowledge. How well it serves the next billion users will ultimately determine how successful it is. Automation is not the true promise of AI in India. It should enable residents to easily access services, farmers to make better decisions, doctors to diagnose patients more quickly, entrepreneurs to act more strategically, and students to learn with greater confidence. AI has the potential to become more than just a symbol of progress if India makes investments in talent, trust, and inclusivity.
( The author is Assistant Professor, University Institute of Biotechnology,
Chandigarh University, Gharuan, Mohali, Punjab . The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)





