India’s IT layoffs spark fears that AI is hurting jobs in a sector critical to its economy

India’s IT layoffs spark fears that AI is hurting jobs in a sector critical to its economy


Avishek Das | Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

India’s IT sector is facing job cuts, and analysts are wary about what the impact of artificial intelligence might mean for an industry critical to the country’s broader economy.

The country’s largest private sector employer, Tata Consultancy Services, which employs over half a million IT workers, announced last month that it would cut more than 12,000 jobs from mostly the middle and senior management levels, equating to 2% of its global workforce — in what will be its biggest layoff so far.

The company’s CEO and managing director K Krithivasan attributed the move to “limited deployment opportunities and skill-mismatch” rather than AI. But that did not quell growing unease within the country, as many viewed the layoffs as a sign of broader and disruptive changes underway in the IT sector, amplified by the growing influence of AI.

TCS and its peers have long relied on India’s vast pool of low-cost, skilled labor to produce software services, a model now coming under pressure as AI is set to automate repetitive tasks and as global clients demand higher levels of innovation.

The IT sector has long been highly sought after among India’s large pool of engineering graduates, meaning any slowdown will have ripple effects across the economy. India produces over 1.5 million engineering graduates annually, according to local media reports.

The sector contributed roughly 7.5% to India’s gross domestic product in fiscal year 2023.

AI adoption a ‘major challenge’

“AI adoption is a major challenge for India. Entry level routine jobs are being displaced, and mid-level jobs are transforming,” said Sonal Varma, chief economist of India and Asia ex-Japan at Nomura.

“This creates the challenge for job creation for India, since the country needs to create about 8 [million] jobs annually,” she added.

Recent earnings also painted a sobering picture of the sector’s performance, with IT majors such as TCS, Infosys and Wipro reporting muted year-on-year growth.

Although that was largely attributed to uncertainty around U.S. tariffs, which weighed on American clients’ budgeting confidence, the recent signs of slowdown in India’s IT sector may be merely a “cyclical change,” as services exports to the U.S. have eased, said Dhiraj Nim, economist and foreign exchange strategist at ANZ Research.

If the economy is unable to adapt, this could lead to job losses, lower services exports, moderate urban consumption. It could risk India getting stuck in the middle-income trap.

Sonal Varma

Chief economist of India and Asia ex-Japan at Nomura bank

AI, however, will be “a trend to reckon with in the years to come,” Nim added.

New Delhi has been striving to incentivize growth in labor-intensive manufacturing sectors such as electronics, textiles, footwear and toys as part of its supply chain relocation strategy.

The layoffs also add to an already strained labor market as the country’s unemployment rate continued to rise. India’s urban unemployment rate rose to 7.1% in June from 6.9% in May and 6.5% in April. The youth unemployment rate in urban areas, among those aged 15 to 29 years, also spiked to nearly 19% from 17.9% in May, and 17.2% in April, according to the statistics ministry.

India's jobs challenge could persist for years, says Standard Chartered

The labor market problem could persist for a few years, said Anubhuti Sahay, head of South Asia economic research at Standard Chartered, urging New Delhi to ramp up efforts in creating more salaried jobs.

She pointed out that the bulk of job creation has so far come from self-employed sectors where wages tend to remain lower than in salaried ones.

Workforce upskilling

Economists have urged New Delhi to accelerate its efforts in upskilling its labor force and bridge the skill gap to lower the risk of job displacement. One in five young adults in India have participated in an AI-skilling program, according to a report supported by Google.org and Asian Development Bank.

AI will replace some jobs but also transform the nature of existing jobs through “constant skilling,” Nomura’s Varma said.

The government has rolled out an internship program aimed up skilling younger adults with actual working experience.

Nim acknowledged that AI could be a threat to jobs, but suggested that whether it will lead to increasing job displacement will depend on skilling and labor movement up the skill chain.

New Delhi also must pivot to higher value-added services and innovation rather than focusing on low-end routine work, economists said.

“If the economy is unable to adapt, this could lead to job losses, lower services exports, moderate urban consumption,” said Varma, with ripple effects across real estate, retail and ancillary services.

“It could risk India getting stuck in the middle-income trap,” Varma added.

Get a weekly roundup of news from India in your inbox every Thursday.
Subscribe now



Source

Don’t ignore this red flag behavior in a relationship, social psychologist says: It could hurt your ‘self-esteem and sense of self’
World

Don’t ignore this red flag behavior in a relationship, social psychologist says: It could hurt your ‘self-esteem and sense of self’

In her latest book, “Love by Design,” social psychologist Sara Nasserzadeh explains that there are six ingredients a romantic relationship needs to be able to last and thrive. These ingredients include compassion, trust and a shared vision and they need to be present to give relationships “a chance to even survive,” she says. “Let alone […]

Read More
Trump wields ‘golden share’ to halt U.S. Steel plant shutdown, WSJ reports
World

Trump wields ‘golden share’ to halt U.S. Steel plant shutdown, WSJ reports

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., Sept. 19, 2025. Ken Cedeno | Reuters The Trump administration stepped in to stop U.S. Steel from idling operations at its Granite City, Ill., plant, exercising new powers tied to the company’s recent takeover, the Wall Street Journal […]

Read More
Look inside: 24-year-old American pays just 8 to rent her apartment in the Japanese countryside
World

Look inside: 24-year-old American pays just $238 to rent her apartment in the Japanese countryside

In 2024, Lexi Smith, 24, was working as a teacher in Atlanta, Georgia, when she decided she was ready for a change of scenery. Smith began exploring the possibility of teaching English abroad and worked with Xplore Asia, an organization that assists individuals in obtaining their TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) certification to […]

Read More