Have not seen a single job lost to AI: Deloitte's Nitin Mittal

Artificial intelligence is rapidly changing industries. However, jobs are not disappearing. Instead, roles are evolving. Repetitive tasks are being affected, but new opportunities are emerging. India has a strong foundation in its services sector ...

IANS
New Delhi, Oct 17 (IANS) Artificial intelligence may be transforming industries at a rapid pace, but it has not taken away jobs -- at least not yet, Nitin Mittal, Principal and Global AI Leader at Deloitte said on Friday.
Artificial intelligence may be transforming industries at a rapid pace, but it has not taken away jobs — at least not yet, Nitin Mittal, Principal and Global AI Leader at Deloitte said on Friday.

Speaking at the NDTV World Summit 2025 during a session titled "The Last Job? AI and the Future of Work," Mittal said he has not come across a single instance of a job being lost due to AI.

"I have not come across a single job lost to AI," Mittal said, while discussing how emerging technologies such as Agentic AI are reshaping work patterns.


He explained that while some roles — particularly those involving repetitive coding — are being affected, they are evolving rather than disappearing.

"Coding is a perfect example. The jobs that get impacted are those done by humans — white coding. Agentic AI in particular, and in the near future, physical AI, will have an impact on jobs. But I have not come across a single job that has been lost to AI," he said.

Mittal described Agentic AI as autonomous systems that can set their own goals, plan, and act with minimal human intervention.
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He also underlined the importance of sovereign AI, which not only protects data but also preserves a nation's culture and language.

When asked how India can ensure it doesn't remain a "back office" in the global AI revolution, Mittal said the country already enjoys a natural advantage because of its strong services sector.

"India has a thrust and a natural advantage in applying technology into AI because of its services sector. But the question is — how do we take advantage of it? It requires large-scale re-skilling and investment," he noted.

He added that while the Government of India has rolled out several AI-focused programmes, society as a whole must take responsibility for driving the transformation.
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"The challenge is that instead of being concerned about the impact on jobs, we should focus on how we can be investors and consumers of AI," he said.
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