Have AI products/LLMs started to disrupt the software services industry?


UPSC Study Note: Have AI Products / LLMs Started to Disrupt the Software Services Industry?


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Period Milestone
1990s India's IT offshoring boom — labour arbitrage model established
2000s–2010s BPO expansion; India captures ~55% of global IT outsourcing market
2017–2022 Robotic Process Automation (RPA) begins automating first-wave repetitive tasks
2022 OpenAI launches ChatGPT; LLM capabilities enter mainstream enterprise discourse
2023 Indian IT majors (TCS, Infosys, Wipro, HCL) announce AI-integrated delivery platforms
2024 IndiaAI Mission approved with ₹10,372 crore; NASSCOM reports AI adoption fastest in IT, fintech, manufacturing [S3][S4]
FY26 est. AI services revenues projected at $10–12 billion in India [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Definitions / Key Terms - LLM (Large Language Model): AI model trained on massive text corpora; capable of code generation, summarisation, and reasoning (e.g., GPT-4, Gemini, Claude, Llama). - AI Washing: Term used by trade unions — describing companies attributing layoffs to AI when the primary drivers may be cost-cutting or demand slowdown. [S1] - GCC (Global Capability Centre): Captive offshore units of MNCs in India; increasingly adopting AI tools independently of traditional IT vendors.

Implementing / Regulatory Bodies - MeitY (Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology) — nodal ministry for IT sector and AI policy. [S3] - NASSCOM — apex IT-BPO industry body; publishes annual sector reports. - IndiaAI Mission — implemented through MeitY; seven pillars including compute infrastructure, datasets, AI startups, and skilling. [S3]

Key Numbers | Metric | Value | |---|---| | IndiaAI Mission budget | ₹10,372 crore (~$1.2 bn) | | Projected AI services revenue FY26 | $10–12 billion | | TCS reported layoffs (2025–26) | ~12,000 | | India's IT-BPO export share (global) | ~55% of global IT outsourcing | | ILO estimate — clerical/routine tasks at high AI substitution risk | up to 60% of tasks in some occupational categories [S2] |


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social / Employment

Scientific / Technological

Ethical / Governance

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. IndiaAI Mission was approved by the Union Cabinet in March 2024 with an outlay of ₹10,372 crore over five years. [S3]
  2. The nodal ministry for IndiaAI Mission is MeitY (Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology). [S3]
  3. Projected AI services revenues in India for FY26 are estimated at $10–12 billion by industry estimates. [S1]
  4. "AI washing" is the term used by trade unions for attributing layoffs primarily to AI when the actual driver is demand slowdown or cost-cutting. [S1]
  5. TCS reported layoffs of approximately 12,000 employees (2025–26) — one of the largest retrenchments in Indian IT history. [S2]
  6. NASSCOM is the apex industry body representing India's IT-BPO sector; it publishes annual reports on workforce and technology trends. [S4]
  7. ILO's 2025 brief "Work Transformed: Promise and Peril of AI" identifies knowledge workers (including software developers) as a high-exposure group — reversing earlier automation-theory assumptions. [S2]
  8. The Union of IT and ITeS Employees is the trade union representing technology-sector workers across India; its General Secretary is Alagunambi Welkin (as of Feb 2026). [S1]
  9. Agentic AI refers to AI systems capable of autonomously executing multi-step workflows — considered the next wave of disruption for IT-managed services. [S2]
  10. India's IT sector captures approximately 55% of the global IT outsourcing market; the US accounts for ~60% of IT export revenues. [S4]
  11. EPFO (Employees' Provident Fund Organisation) data is the primary formal-sector employment tracker for India's IT workforce. [Background knowledge, cross-check via mospi.gov.in]
  12. EU AI Act (2024) applies to Indian IT firms serving EU clients — creating compliance obligations without a corresponding Indian domestic AI law. [OECD/S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-III: Indian Economy — IT sector, employment, technology and industry, effects of liberalisation on industrial growth. - GS-III: Science and Technology — developments and their applications and effects in everyday life; awareness in IT. - GS-II (tangential): E-governance, government policies and interventions; International relations (US-India tech trade).

Specific syllabus headings: - "Effects of globalisation on Indian economy" (GS-III) - "Awareness in the fields of IT, Space, Computers, Robotics, Nano-technology, Bio-technology" (GS-III) - "Growth and Development" including employment trends (GS-III)

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "India's IT sector built its competitive advantage on labour-cost arbitrage. Critically examine whether the rise of AI and LLMs is dismantling this advantage, and suggest policy measures to enable a just transition for affected workers." (GS-III, ~250 words) 2. "'AI washing' versus genuine AI disruption — evaluate the evidence from India's IT and BPO sectors and discuss the implications for social security policy." (GS-III / GS-II, ~250 words) 3. "The IndiaAI Mission aims to make India a global AI hub. Assess its provisions in the context of threats to India's existing software services export model." (GS-III, ~150 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
IndiaAI Mission Direct policy response to AI disruption; budget, pillars, MeitY implementation
NASSCOM & India's IT Export Economy Structural context; data on employment, revenues, GCCs
Gig Economy & Social Security (Code on Social Security, 2020) Displaced IT workers increasingly shift to gig/contract work
National Policy on Electronics 2019 Upstream hardware policy that complements software AI strategy
ILO Conventions on Decent Work / Future of Work International normative framework for AI-driven workforce changes
EU AI Act 2024 Creates compliance obligations for Indian IT firms in EU market; GS-II IR angle
Automation & Structural Unemployment Classical economics debate; relevant for GS-III economic concepts
Digital India & BPO Promotion Scheme Predecessor initiatives that shaped the current IT ecosystem

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "IT disruption = only job losses" — Trap: Prelims options may include "AI has created more jobs than destroyed in IT." Reality is nuanced; net employment effect is still debated and sector-dependent.
  2. Confusing IndiaAI Mission with Digital India — IndiaAI Mission (2024, ₹10,372 cr, MeitY) is distinct from Digital India programme (2015, broader digital infrastructure mandate).
  3. Attributing TCS layoffs solely to AI — The article explicitly discusses "AI washing"; the correct nuance is that AI is one of several factors alongside global demand slowdown.
  4. Wrong ministry: Some aspirants attribute AI policy to NITI Aayog (which has an advisory role) rather than MeitY, which is the implementing ministry for IndiaAI Mission.
  5. Assuming BPO = low-skill only — Modern BPOs handle analytics, legal process outsourcing (LPO), and finance; mid-skill analytical roles are also exposed to LLM disruption, not just data-entry work.

11. Sources