AI could add up to US$1.7 trillion to India’s economy by 2035

Artificial Intelligence is emerging as one of the most powerful drivers of economic transformation worldwide, and India is no exception. A new report by NITI Aayog suggests that with the right adoption, AI could significantly accelerate India’s growth trajectory and help realise the Viksit Bharat vision over the next decade.

AI in trade_TPCI

Artificial Intelligence is no longer a far-off promise. Around the world, it is already reshaping industries, creating new business models, and setting the pace for economic growth. For India, it could become the defining lever that helps the country achieve its Viksit Bharat vision of becoming a developed nation by 2047.

A new report by NITI Aayog, AI for Viksit Bharat: The Opportunity for Accelerated Economic Growth, suggests that the stakes are huge. With rapid adoption, AI could add between US$ 1 and US$ 1.7 trillion to India’s economy by 2035, pushing GDP to around US$ 8.3 trillion. Without this push, growth is likely to stay on its current path of 5.7% annually, which would leave GDP closer to US$ 6.6 trillion. BVR Subrahmanyam, CEO of NITI Aayog, stressed in his foreword that India has no option but to raise productivity and unlock new avenues of growth, and AI may be the single most decisive lever.

Engines of AI-led growth

According to the study, AI will fuel the economy through three powerful channels. First, mainstream adoption across industries such as banking, finance, and manufacturing could sharply improve efficiency and productivity. Second, the use of generative AI in research and development could transform areas like pharmaceuticals, automobiles, and digital design. Third, India’s own technology services sector could reinvent itself for higher-value opportunities, moving beyond traditional IT outsourcing and into new AI-driven business models. Together, these shifts could deliver the US$ 1.4–1.7 trillion upside identified by the report.

Some of the biggest gains are expected in sectors that touch everyday life. In financial services, AI could power advanced fraud detection, smarter credit scoring, and personalised products, unlocking as much as US$ 55 billion in value. In manufacturing, technologies like predictive maintenance and real-time quality checks could add US$ 85–100 billion. Pharmaceuticals may see the steepest disruption, with AI reducing drug discovery timelines by up to 80% and cutting costs by nearly a third. Even the automotive industry is set for transformation, as AI aids in designing smarter components and enabling software-driven vehicles, which could strengthen India’s exports while reducing dependence on imports.

Building an ecosystem for innovation

Industry leaders say India cannot afford to lag behind. Debjani Ghosh, a distinguished fellow at NITI Aayog and one of the architects of the Frontier Tech Hub, observed that countries which secure critical technologies early often set the tone for the future. To encourage innovation at scale, NITI Aayog is preparing to launch a Frontier Tech Challenge, which will fund the top 50 cutting-edge ideas. Subrahmanyam has also called on states to integrate frontier technologies into governance, ensuring they deliver tangible benefits and not just policies on paper.

Despite the optimism, the report does not underplay the hurdles. Legacy IT systems, a shortage of skilled AI talent, weak infrastructure, and unresolved regulatory and data privacy concerns could all slow progress. To counter this, the report urges urgent investment in computing capacity, sovereign data platforms, workforce reskilling, and ethical frameworks that ensure AI’s benefits are widely shared.

India’s growth story over the next decade will be defined not just by traditional levers like capital and labour, but by how effectively it can harness technology. AI is no longer about futuristic experiments; it is about real-world productivity, innovation, and transformation. If India can combine rapid adoption with responsible deployment, it could not only sustain high growth but also take a leadership position in the global AI economy.


FAQs

1. How much can AI contribute to India’s GDP by 2035?

According to NITI Aayog’s recent report, Artificial Intelligence could add between $1–1.7 trillion to India’s economy by 2035. With accelerated adoption, India’s GDP could touch $8.3 trillion, compared to $6.6 trillion under the current growth path.

2. Which sectors in India will benefit the most from AI adoption?

Key sectors expected to see major gains include:

Banking & Finance – fraud detection, credit scoring, personalized services (worth $50–55 billion).

Manufacturing – predictive maintenance, smart factories, real-time quality control ($85–100 billion).

Pharma – AI-driven drug discovery, cutting costs by 30% and timelines by up to 80%.

Automotive – AI-powered vehicle design and exports boost.

3. What role will AI play in achieving the Viksit Bharat vision?

India aims for 8%+ sustained growth under its Viksit Bharat vision. AI can act as the “decisive lever” by raising productivity, fueling innovation, and pushing Indian IT into high-value services. Without AI, India risks staying on a slower 5.7% growth track.

4. What are the main challenges India faces in scaling AI?

The report highlights hurdles like: outdated IT systems, lack of AI-ready infrastructure, shortage of skilled talent, data privacy issues, and regulatory gaps. Addressing these challenges through investment in compute power, skilling, and ethical AI frameworks is crucial.

5. How can Indian businesses leverage AI for growth and innovation?

Businesses can adopt AI to boost efficiency, cut costs, and create new products. From automating processes in manufacturing to offering personalized customer experiences in banking, AI is opening up new revenue streams. Startups and IT firms can also move into high-value services like generative AI and frontier tech, attracting global investments.

Leave a comment

Subscribe To Newsletter

Stay ahead in the dynamic world of trade and commerce with India Business & Trade's weekly newsletter.