Have Jobs Been Lost to AI? Insights from Deloitte’s Nitin Mittal

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- No job losses reported due to AI according to Deloitte.
- Agentic AI is transforming work dynamics.
- Focus on re-skilling for workforce adaptation.
- India's services sector provides a competitive edge.
- AI should be viewed as an opportunity, not a threat.
New Delhi, Oct 17 (NationPress) Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping industries, yet it hasn't resulted in job losses—at least not so far, according to Nitin Mittal, Principal and Global AI Leader at Deloitte, who spoke on Friday.
During his session at the NDTV World Summit 2025 titled “The Last Job? AI and the Future of Work,” Mittal remarked that he has yet to see a single case of job loss attributed to AI.
“I have not encountered any job lost to AI,” Mittal stated, elaborating on how technologies like Agentic AI are changing work dynamics.
He noted that although certain roles, especially those involving repetitive coding tasks, are being impacted, they are not vanishing but rather evolving.
“Coding serves as a prime example. The jobs affected are typically those performed by humans—white coding tasks. Agentic AI and the anticipated emergence of physical AI will influence jobs, but I have not witnessed a job loss due to AI,” he affirmed.
Mittal characterized Agentic AI as autonomous systems capable of setting their own objectives, planning, and acting with limited human oversight.
He emphasized the significance of sovereign AI, which safeguards data while also upholding a nation’s culture and language.
When queried about how India can avoid being relegated to a “back office” in the global AI landscape, Mittal pointed out that the country possesses a natural advantage due to its robust services sector.
“India has an inherent strength in leveraging technology for AI, courtesy of its services sector. However, the challenge lies in how we capitalize on this advantage, which will necessitate extensive re-skilling and investment,” he noted.
He added that while the Government of India has initiated numerous AI-centric programs, collective societal responsibility is essential to drive this transformation.
“Instead of worrying about job impacts, we should concentrate on becoming both investors and consumers of AI,” he concluded.