
Highlights
- Workforce Shift: EY’s May 2026 Economy Watch report reveals that rapid AI evolution will heavily impact employment patterns for India’s skilled labour force.
- White-Collar Risks: Growing corporate adoption of generative AI and automation tools to cut operational costs poses structural risks to traditional IT and BPM roles.
- Economic Outlook: Despite technological disruption, India remains on track to be a dominant global economy, potentially topping PPP terms by 2063.
NEW DELHI — India’s heavily celebrated, high-paying information technology (IT) and business process management (BPM) job markets are standing at a critical evolutionary crossroads. According to the May 2026 edition of EY’s Economy Watch report, the aggressive expansion of artificial intelligence (AI) is projected to create permanent, structural shifts in how white-collar professionals secure employment across the subcontinent.
For over twenty years, India’s booming IT services sector has served as the backbone of the nation’s services exports, providing lucrative careers to millions of young engineers and specialists. However, the report highlights that the global corporate pivot toward generative AI, automation, and advanced agentic platforms is rapidly altering traditional hiring models.
Balancing Innovation and Risk
While AI continues to present massive opportunities for driving corporate productivity, EY points out that it simultaneously threatens workers who fail to transition.
“The fast-paced evolution of AI is expected to have a long-term impact on the employment of India’s skilled labour force, which had, hitherto, found placement in the lucrative job market linked to IT services,” the report notes.
The core challenge for India lies in the speed of adaptability. As automation assumes routine cognitive workloads, a substantial talent gap emerges between legacy software development and AI-native architecture.
A Call for Economic Re-Strategizing
The technological disruption arrives at an interesting time. Projections from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) maintain that India will remain among the fastest-growing major economies, with the potential to become the world’s largest economy in purchasing power parity (PPP) terms by 2063 under favorable settings.
However, safeguarding this path requires active intervention. EY advises that Indian policymakers and industry leaders must look beyond short-term metrics. Preserving the nation’s long-term economic trajectory demands a complete recalibration of education and upskilling strategies. Addressing global geopolitical friction and energy security alongside AI integration will be decisive in keeping India’s skilled workforce globally competitive.






