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India Embraces AI for Development Amid US-China Tech Rivalry

As United States and China battle for AI dominance, India, Indonesia and Vietnam aim to use AI for development and digital autonomy.

Sentinel Digital Desk

NEW DELHI: While the US and China are locked in an intense rivalry in the AI race to gain a dominant position in the world, countries such as India, Indonesia, and Vietnam are eyeing the frontier technology with the more modest objective of meeting their developmental goals and maintaining digital autonomy, according to an article.

The United States leads frontier innovation, from large language models to artificial general intelligence (AGI), while China excels in embodied AI, industrial robotics, and hardware integration. Beneath it lies a struggle over chokepoints: advanced semiconductors versus critical minerals and energy infrastructure, states the article authored by Tuhu Nugraha and published in the Modern Diplomacy news portal.

For much of the Global South, the stakes are political and developmental. Concentration of AI value risks structural dependency, where data and profits flow outward while policy space narrows. Without strategic autonomy, developing economies risk absorption into rival digital blocs, it observed.

Indonesia and Vietnam aim to reach developed-country status by 2045, while India has set 2047, its centenary of independence, as its own milestone. These synchronized horizons anchor deeper technological coordination among three middle powers converging around digital strategic autonomy, the article pointed out. This coordination reflects shared national interests. For India, Indonesia, and Vietnam, AI is less a prestige contest than a vehicle for structural transformation, echoing earlier waves of East Asian industrialization. The ambition is to reduce poverty and secure dignity through technological upgrading. The challenge lies in translating aspiration into institutional strategy.

The article highlights that India practices issue-based multi-alignment rather than bloc politics. In the digital domain, this translates into exporting Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): modular identity systems, payment rails, and governance frameworks that can be adapted across developing economies.

Through the IndiaAI Mission and projects like BharatGen, India invests heavily in domestic AI capacity while emphasizing “safe and trusted AI”. Governance is embedded into architecture. India’s objective is not alignment but institutionalized autonomy through interoperable public systems, the article said. (IANS)

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