India must reskill millions or lose AI race, says IBM Chief

BAKU, AZERBAIJAN — Only around 30% of India’s technology workforce holds the AI skills global employers require — a gap Sandip Patel, Managing Director of IBM India, described at a Bengaluru summit as both the country’s greatest competitive risk and its clearest opportunity.
According to a report from News.AZ, IBM India has pledged to train 5 million people in AI, cybersecurity, and quantum computing by 2030, in partnership with the Indian government.
IBM training pledge targets 5 million India workers
India’s demographic advantage sets the stakes: more than half of its 1.4 billion people are under 30, and the country’s theoretical AI-ready workforce potential stands at 350 million — a labor pool larger than the entire employed workforce of the United States.
The gap between that potential and current 30% AI skills coverage is what IBM and the Indian government are now working to close.
AI automation is actively displacing the traditional software and IT outsourcing roles that anchored India’s export growth — making the reskilling imperative not aspirational but defensive.
“That demographic dividend that’s sitting here — unleashing that is a phenomenal opportunity,” said Patel.
IBM’s tier-two expansion takes AI talent beyond Bengaluru
IBM is expanding into tier-two cities beyond Bengaluru, including Kochi — where the company scaled to nearly 4,000 employees in two years — and Lucknow, to access AI talent in markets less saturated than established metro technology centers.
The tier-two push reflects IBM’s working assumption that reskilled Indian professionals are globally deployable — and that concentrating AI development in metro centers alone undersells the scale of the demographic advantage available in smaller cities.
IBM’s training pledge works in tandem with government initiatives — the Indian government is a named partner in the 5 million training target — reflecting a recognition that reskilling at national scale requires public-sector coordination, not corporate programs alone.
If India closes its AI skills gap, its existing offshore delivery infrastructure positions it to absorb global AI services demand at a scale no other market can replicate.
For BPO and IT services operators in India, the reskilling picture cuts two ways: firms that invest in AI upskilling now — through partnerships like IBM’s 5 million training pledge and government-backed programs — are building the workforce profile enterprise clients will require in 2027 and 2028 contracts.
Those that defer are converting today’s cost advantage into tomorrow’s structural displacement, at the exact moment competitors in Pakistan, Vietnam, and Eastern Europe are accelerating their own AI talent development. The demographic window India’s young workforce represents will not hold open indefinitely.

Independent




