Research released from Accenture reveals that
artificial intelligence (AI) could add US$957 billion to the Indian economy by
changing the nature of work to create better outcomes for businesses and
society. The report, ‘Rewire for Growth,’ estimates that AI has the
potential to increase India’s annual growth rate of gross value added (GVA) by
1.3 percentage points, lifting the country’s income by 15 percent in 2035.
“AI’s transformative power can be
compared to the advent of computing itself, and there’s strong early evidence
that AI can play a key role in unlocking socio-economic value in India. The
time to act is now. With the right investments AI can create a flywheel effect
‘liberating’ people to create long term economic and societal value,” said Rekha
M. Menon, senior managing director and chairman, Accenture India.
The report explores the strength of
India’s AI innovation ecosystem relative to other G20 economies across five key
pillars– Universities, Startups, Large Businesses, Policy makers and
Multi-Stakeholder Partnerships. It studies the current state of activity,
areas of opportunities and challenges, and finds that even with a tech-savvy
talent pool, renowned universities, healthy levels of entrepreneurship and
strong corporations, India lags on key indicators of AI development.
The research finds that major Indian
technical universities have been pioneering fundamental research in AI, but are
not doing enough to strengthen the AI ecosystem around them, unlike their
global counterparts such as Cambridge and Oxford in the UK. It also finds that
although AI startups have witnessed higher than average growth in India since
2011, and in 2016 ranked third among G20 countries measured by the number of AI
startups, the size of funding received is substantially smaller than in the
United States and China, reflecting the limited success of India’s AI startups
in achieving scale so far.
In line with global trends, large
businesses will play a key role in unlocking the economic value of AI, with
more than 88 percent of businesses in India surveyed by Accenture earlier this
year, expecting to make moderate-to-extensive investments in one or more
AI-related technologies over the next three years. In addition, digital
platform companies can play a key role in driving AI innovations in India, in
line with global trends. Also, that small and large companies alike will need
an enabling environment and policy framework to advance AI-led growth.
The report suggests that to realize
the full potential of AI, India needs concentrated effort at the national
level, with collaboration between policy makers, civil society and the private
sector to:
· Build
an AI blueprint: Develop
a long-term vision and action plan that unites the ecosystem, and addresses
technical and ethical questions as they arise.
· Bolster
R&D: Increase spending on core AI research, facilitate ecosystem
collaboration for innovation, and create opportunities for smaller players.
· Democratize
data: Enable greater access to data, to drive the
successful adoption of AI for societal and business needs.
· Prepare
the next generation: Invest in building multidisciplinary and STEAM skills—science,
technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics—demanded by AI.
· Embrace
smart regulation: Set guiding principles on
“responsible AI” and develop regulation that adapts to the shorter innovation
cycles of AI to achieve the twin goals of promoting trust and preserving
maximum flexibility to innovate.
“The economic boost will be driven by
innovative AI technologies that enable people to make more efficient use of
their time and do what humans do best – create, imagine and innovate new
things. What’s needed is a clear, long-term vision, and a multi-stakeholder
action plan that balances growth with the ethical questions posed by AI,” Menon
added.
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