The Promise of an AI-Ready Generation
Across India, a massive effort is underway to equip the youth with artificial intelligence skills. Government initiatives like 'YUVAi' and 'IndiaAI FutureSkills' aim to create a vast talent pool, offering free courses to democratise AI literacy. These
programs are designed to empower students and professionals with everything from generative AI tools to the ethical frameworks for their use. The goal is clear: prepare India's demographic dividend for the jobs of tomorrow and position the nation as a global leader in the digital economy. Young people are responding, eagerly enrolling in courses and gaining certifications, confident that these new skills are their ticket to a prosperous career. They are doing exactly what they have been asked to do—become 'future-ready'.
The Harsh Reality of the Job Market
However, the reality they face upon entering the workforce is starkly different from the promise. While they are armed with sophisticated technical skills, they are met with a labour market dominated by short-term contracts, freelance assignments, and gig work. This gig economy, projected to expand to 23.5 million workers by 2030, is now a primary source of employment for young people. But this type of work is defined by what it lacks: job security, benefits like health insurance or provident fund, and stable income. Studies show that while gig work offers flexibility, it comes with income instability and limited career progression, leading many young workers to see it as a temporary fix rather than a long-term career. Even outside the gig economy, rising contractualisation in the formal sector means that a growing share of the workforce is hired through third-party agencies with few benefits.
A Mismatch of Skills and Structures
This creates a fundamental mismatch. We are providing 21st-century skills to our youth but offering them 20th-century employment structures that are increasingly precarious. The very sectors where AI skills are most in demand—IT, e-commerce, logistics, and creative industries—are also the ones pioneering these flexible, but insecure, employment models. AI is being used to automate tasks, but it is also being used to manage a distributed, on-demand workforce, further entrenching the gig model. The result is that many AI-ready youths find themselves in a cycle of temporary projects, constantly hunting for the next gig, unable to make long-term financial plans or build a stable life. The unemployment rate for youth remains a concern, particularly in urban areas, underscoring that even with the right skills, stable jobs are not guaranteed.
The Path Forward: Security, Not Just Skills
The solution cannot be to simply double down on more skilling. While continuous learning is crucial, the conversation must shift from a sole focus on skills to a broader discussion about the structure of work itself. We need to build a new social contract for the AI age. This includes exploring policies that provide a safety net for all workers, regardless of their employment status. Ideas like portable benefits that are tied to the individual rather than the employer, minimum wage guarantees for gig workers, and stronger legal frameworks that recognize the rights of platform-based labour are essential starting points. The challenge isn't a skills gap; it's a security gap. AI-driven automation is transforming industries, but it's crucial that the benefits of this productivity boom are shared more equitably. If we want to truly leverage our AI-ready youth, we must create a job market that offers them not just a task for today, but a career for tomorrow.
















