The increasing integration of artificial intelligence (AI) across sectors will cause a short-term churn, but lead to a substantial increase in productivity in the long term and fuel job creation, said Ajay Kela, president and CEO, Wadhwani Foundation.


“There are jobs that die because technologies come in. Those same technologies give birth to new jobs…In the short term, there will be disruption. Those that can’t keep up will be left behind,” he told Business Standard. Kela was talking on the sidelines of an event in New Delhi today.


The Wadhwani Foundation on Tuesday signed memorandums of understanding (MoUs) with the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), IIT Bombay, IIT Delhi, IIT Hyderabad, IIT Kanpur, IISc Bangalore, and C-CAMP, to launch Wadhwani Innovation Network Centres of Excellence (WIN-COE) in these institutes.


Each of these centres will receive up to $1 million annually. An additional joint investment with AICTE of $10 million via its 13 ‘Indovation Centres’ will support the research and translation activities of the next 100 institutes in the country.


Through this initiative, the firm aims to translate over 1,000 innovations annually into product-led startups.


“The biggest challenge for the country, especially with the growing youth population, is jobs. This initiative, alongside all our other initiatives, is targeted at the creation of these family wage jobs,” Kela said.


He also believes that in the long run, productivity will increase with AI. “In the long term, there will be an enormous increase in productivity across the board in the industry, which can have a significant impact on the growth of the nation, and, in turn, job creation,” Kela added.


On the foundation’s overarching plans in India, Kela said the overall target is to create 10 lakh jobs globally by 2030, with around 60 per cent of them in India, via its national entrepreneurship platform – Wadhwani Entrepreneur Network.


Furthermore, through the national skilling platform, the firm has a target of enabling one crore family-wage jobs during the same period.


“Our aim is to inspire students to look at entrepreneurship as a career, try to minimise the failure rate of those that start companies – which is more than 90 per cent, and to support micro businesses and businesses that have proven business models,” Kela said.


He added that policies around supporting startups and innovation are the need of the hour.


“The pressing need for the Indian government is (GDP) growth, tied to job growth. So, policies are required around supporting entrepreneurs, innovation, and high-quality skilling, tied to a very strong matrix of job creation,” Kela said.


He added that the upcoming Union Budget should also “bias towards” the creation of jobs, and supporting industries which would lead to job creation.


“For instance, we tend to ignore the 60 million micro businesses in India. Even if we consider roughly one per cent of them – around 1 million businesses – creating one job a year, we can create 5-10 million jobs a year,” Kela said.

First Published: Jun 11 2024 | 7:18 PM IST



Source link

YouTube
Instagram
WhatsApp