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A tale of bread and chapatis emerges in India's quiet AI revolution

The Straits Times

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August 06, 2025

India, the IT centre of the world, is hoping to make its mark as an AI power. And it might well succeed.

- Debarshi Dasgupta

A tale of bread and chapatis emerges in India's quiet AI revolution

When Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang met India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2023, he went away with a lucid understanding of India's artificial intelligence (AI) ambitions. India, he was told, should not be exporting flour only to import bread.

It was a simple analogy to explain why the country must manufacture AI technologies at home instead of exporting data and becoming dependent on other countries for AI-driven solutions.

It was also a good indication of India's aspiration to build its own AI ecosystem and harness the technology to address its unique developmental needs.

An example of this home-grown AI-led revolution in the making are four Indian start-ups building foundation models based on Indian datasets and needs with support from the government.

Among them is Sarvam AI, which is developing a sovereign AI foundational model that will be fluent in multiple Indian languages and used for digital public services.

India's AI market is expected to triple to US$17 billion (S$21.9 billion) by 2027, making it one of the fastest-growing AI economies globally.

Researchers here are developing AI-led solutions for sectors ranging from agriculture to healthcare. And with the right fillip from the government and greater industry-academia collaboration, India could emerge as one of the AI engines of the world — not just as a service provider but also as a product innovator.

But this opportunity comes with many challenges, not least finding the talent and other scarce resources, especially computing power, to see this ambitious and years-long vision through.

WHY INDIA HAS A HEADSTART

At around 5.5 million workers, India has the largest pool of IT professionals in the world. It is a talent pipeline that keeps growing with millions of STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) graduates entering the economy each year, many of them genuinely interested in AI development.

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