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India's AI ambitions came under scrutiny after Anthropic, a US-based AI startup, blocked foreign nationals from accessing its advanced models. This move followed a US export-control directive citing national security. The incident sparked debate about India's position in the global AI race and the role of its major IT firms.
An X user named Piramal, who works on payment agents for the machine economy, argued that India's leading IT companies—TCS, Infosys, Wipro, and HCL—should not be blamed for not building AI models like ChatGPT. Infosys co-founder Kris Gopalakrishnan endorsed Piramal's perspective, highlighting its relevance to the ongoing debate.
Piramal explained that building advanced AI models requires significant infrastructure and funding. Companies such as OpenAI and Anthropic invest billions of dollars, supported by partners like Microsoft and Amazon. Indian IT firms, however, operate under a different business model. They are publicly traded, prioritize steady profits, and are accountable to shareholders. This structure limits their ability to make large, risky investments with uncertain returns.
Piramal noted that if an Indian IT CEO reduced shareholder dividends by 80 percent to purchase 50,000 Nvidia H100 chips for an AI project, the company's stock could drop 30 percent in a single day. The legal and financial structure of these firms is designed for stable margins, not high-risk ventures.
Piramal emphasized that Indian IT companies play a larger economic role beyond software development. The sector brings in over $200 billion in foreign currency annually through service exports. This inflow stabilizes the rupee, strengthens foreign exchange reserves, and supports India's ability to manage imports and inflation.
The latest Economic Survey also highlights that exports are a reliable way to achieve sustained foreign exchange gains. However, India's progress in the Global Innovation Index has been slower than some peer economies, particularly in high-technology manufacturing and private R&D.
Piramal stated that Indian IT directly employs over 5 million people and indirectly supports millions more in sectors like real estate, hospitality, transport, and retail. The industry has helped expand India's middle class, especially from smaller cities and towns. He described IT as a key driver of upward mobility for many families.
While the sector is gradually upskilling its workforce for AI roles, the debate continues on whether automation will lead to job losses or create new opportunities. So far, there is no clear evidence of widespread job losses due to AI.
Piramal argued that the main opportunity for Indian IT lies in deploying and integrating AI models, not building them. Indian IT firms excel at customizing AI solutions, fine-tuning models with private data, and managing large-scale enterprise deployments. He compared IT service integrators to construction crews who build skyscrapers, rather than the companies that produce raw materials.
According to Piramal, building frontier AI models is better suited to governments, research institutions, and venture-backed startups. Indian IT firms have already played a crucial role in strengthening the economy, generating jobs, and supporting the growth of the middle class.





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