India has emerged as one of the world’s most dynamic artificial intelligence (AI) markets, powered by a vast pool of skilled professionals, widespread digital adoption, and a rapidly expanding technology ecosystem.
However, a new report suggests that despite these strengths, India faces a significant challenge in converting its talent advantage into global AI leadership.
According to the State of India’s Digital Economy (SIDE) 2026 report released by the ICRIER-Prosus Centre for Internet and Digital Economy, India possesses the world’s second-largest AI talent pool after the United States and accounts for approximately 26% of global AI users. Yet, the country attracts only about 1% of global private investment in AI.
The report describes India as a talent-rich but capital-constrained AI economy, highlighting a growing mismatch between human capital and financial support for innovation.
India’s broader digital economy continues to gain global recognition. The SIDE 2026 report ranks India as the fifth-largest digital economy globally and fourth in standalone AI performance.
Notably, India ranks ahead of several advanced economies, including Germany, France, Japan, and United Kingdom.
| Rank | Country | Category |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | United States | Developed/Advanced |
| 2 | China | Emerging/Developing |
| 3 | Singapore | Developed/Advanced |
| 4 | India | Emerging/Developing |
| 5 | United Arab Emirates | Emerging/Developing |
| 6 | France | Developed/Advanced |
| 7 | Germany | Developed/Advanced |
| 8 | South Korea | Developed/Advanced |
| 9 | Canada | Developed/Advanced |
| 10 | Japan | Developed/Advanced |
These rankings underscore India’s growing influence in the global technology landscape.
Despite producing millions of engineers, data scientists, and AI professionals, India continues to receive only a small fraction of global AI funding.
The report highlights that while India accounts for roughly 26% of worldwide AI users, it secures merely about 1% of global private AI investment.
This disparity raises concerns about whether India can develop globally competitive AI companies at the same pace as countries with stronger venture capital ecosystems.
Modern AI innovation increasingly depends on access to:
Training frontier AI models requires massive computational resources, including high-performance data centers and specialized AI processors.
The global race for AI leadership is closely linked to access to advanced chips, particularly GPUs and AI accelerators that power large-scale machine learning systems.
Deep-tech innovation often requires years of investment before generating commercial returns. Countries leading the AI race benefit from robust venture capital and institutional funding networks.
India’s digital transformation has been accelerated by globally recognized public digital platforms such as:
Digital identity systems.
Real-time payment infrastructure.
Public digital services.
Digital governance initiatives.
These systems have enabled rapid adoption of digital technologies across sectors.
India remains one of the world's fastest-growing fintech markets, supported by widespread smartphone usage, digital payments, and financial inclusion initiatives.
India continues to be among the world's largest startup ecosystems, producing thousands of technology-focused ventures across AI, fintech, healthtech, edtech, and enterprise software.
The report warns that strong adoption rates alone may not guarantee leadership in AI innovation.
While India has successfully built application-layer businesses using AI technologies, frontier AI research and development require substantial investment in infrastructure and research capabilities.
Countries currently leading AI innovation continue to benefit from concentrated access to computing power, research talent, and investment capital.
The SIDE 2026 report argues that closing the investment and infrastructure gap will require coordinated efforts between government, academia, investors, and industry.
Making advanced computing resources more accessible to startups, researchers, and educational institutions.
Increasing funding for deep-tech startups working on foundational AI technologies rather than only application-based solutions.
Building stronger partnerships between universities, research institutions, and private enterprises to accelerate commercialization of AI research.
One of India's biggest strengths remains its enormous digital population.
With around 26% of global AI users, India generates valuable real-world data, testing environments, and market opportunities that can support future AI innovation.
This user scale provides a strong foundation for developing localized AI applications across healthcare, education, agriculture, manufacturing, financial services, and governance.
The report positions India at a crucial moment in its AI journey.
The country's success in the next decade will depend on whether it can transform its talent advantage into innovation capacity and intellectual property creation.
Without stronger investment intensity, India risks becoming primarily a consumer and adopter of advanced AI technologies developed elsewhere.
The SIDE 2026 report presents a nuanced picture of India’s AI ecosystem. While the country has emerged as a global leader in AI talent, digital adoption, and application-layer innovation, significant challenges remain in attracting private capital and building advanced AI infrastructure.
India’s position as the world’s second-largest AI talent hub and home to approximately 26% of global AI users gives it a powerful competitive advantage. However, receiving only about 1% of global private AI investment highlights a structural weakness that could limit future growth.
As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly central to economic competitiveness, India’s ability to bridge the gap between talent and capital will determine whether it becomes a global AI innovator or remains primarily a large-scale adopter of technologies developed elsewhere.