Is AI the future of hiring? India is already acting like it is
For years, the global conversation around artificial intelligence in recruitment has sounded like a courtroom debate. Is it ethical? Is it biased? Should it be regulated before it is adopted? India, it seems, has stepped out of the courtroom and into the workplace.
New global research by Indeed, conducted across 12 countries, shows that India leads the world in AI acceptance during hiring. Just 5% of employers and 8% of job seekers in India report avoiding AI tools altogether. In the UK, by contrast, nearly two-thirds of candidates say they would not use AI tools in their job search. Globally, about 40% of candidates remain hesitant. The data tells a story that is less about technology and more about temperament.
13:46
To understand India’s position, one must first acknowledge the context. Over the past decade, Indians have embraced digital infrastructure at an extraordinary pace, from mobile banking to online education to gig platforms. For millions, technology has not replaced opportunity; it has expanded it.
AI in hiring, then, does not feel like an intrusion. It feels like an upgrade.
The research suggests that Indian employers and job seekers have reached a tacit agreement: AI can assist, but it should not dominate. It can screen, match, and sort, but the final judgment still rests with humans. That shared understanding reduces friction. In other markets, that agreement does not yet exist.
The UK’s resistance, where nearly two-thirds of candidates avoid AI tools, signals a deeper anxiety. There, the concern is not about convenience but about control. Who trains the algorithm? What biases are embedded? Can a machine truly assess ambition, resilience, or potential?
These are valid concerns. But what is striking is the degree to which Indian respondents appear less paralysed by them.
Trust, in this context, does not necessarily mean blind faith. It reflects a practical calculation: in a labour market as vast and competitive as India’s, AI can reduce chaos. When thousands apply for a single role, automation becomes less of a luxury and more of a logistical necessity. Indeed’s findings suggest that both employers and candidates in India recognise this reality.
Yet the research does not romanticise AI. It identifies seven critical disconnects that continue to make hiring difficult worldwide. These gaps are not technical; they are structural and psychological.
Employers speak of skills shortages while candidates struggle to decode what “job-ready” truly means. Recruiters prioritise speed, but applicants crave transparency. Organisations say they value potential, yet automated systems often reward keyword precision over nuanced experience. AI can streamline processes. It cannot resolve contradictions.
In fact, when poorly governed, it can widen them, filtering out unconventional candidates, reinforcing historical hiring patterns, and privileging polished digital profiles over raw promise.
The real risk is not that AI will take over hiring. It is that hiring will become overly optimised. Recruitment, at its core, is an act of judgment under uncertainty. It requires reading between lines, interpreting ambition, and sometimes taking a bet on potential. Algorithms excel at pattern recognition; they struggle with intuition.
India’s enthusiasm for AI may give it a competitive edge in efficiency. The next challenge will be safeguarding empathy.
Indeed’s research positions India ahead in acceptance. The harder question is whether that acceptance will be accompanied by robust oversight, clear guidelines, bias audits, and transparent communication to candidates about how AI shapes decisions.
What the data ultimately reveals is a mindset shift. In many parts of the world, AI in hiring is framed as a threat to fairness. In India, it appears to be framed as a tool for access.
That difference matters. For a country where scale defines every system, from education to employment, technological mediation often feels inevitable. The debate has moved from ideological resistance to practical deployment.
But leadership in adoption is not the same as leadership in ethics. As AI becomes embedded in recruitment pipelines, the responsibility intensifies.
If India has moved beyond asking whether to use AI, the next, more difficult question awaits: can it use AI without eroding the human core of hiring?
The answer will not be found in code. It will be found in how employers choose to balance efficiency with judgment, and how much transparency candidates demand in return.Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!
AI Will Create More Than It Destroys: Microsoft India Chief Puneet Chandok Predicts 3-Year Rise
A different starting point
To understand India’s position, one must first acknowledge the context. Over the past decade, Indians have embraced digital infrastructure at an extraordinary pace, from mobile banking to online education to gig platforms. For millions, technology has not replaced opportunity; it has expanded it.
AI in hiring, then, does not feel like an intrusion. It feels like an upgrade.
The research suggests that Indian employers and job seekers have reached a tacit agreement: AI can assist, but it should not dominate. It can screen, match, and sort, but the final judgment still rests with humans. That shared understanding reduces friction. In other markets, that agreement does not yet exist.
The trust equation
The UK’s resistance, where nearly two-thirds of candidates avoid AI tools, signals a deeper anxiety. There, the concern is not about convenience but about control. Who trains the algorithm? What biases are embedded? Can a machine truly assess ambition, resilience, or potential?
These are valid concerns. But what is striking is the degree to which Indian respondents appear less paralysed by them.
Trust, in this context, does not necessarily mean blind faith. It reflects a practical calculation: in a labour market as vast and competitive as India’s, AI can reduce chaos. When thousands apply for a single role, automation becomes less of a luxury and more of a logistical necessity. Indeed’s findings suggest that both employers and candidates in India recognise this reality.
The seven fault lines that technology cannot fix
Yet the research does not romanticise AI. It identifies seven critical disconnects that continue to make hiring difficult worldwide. These gaps are not technical; they are structural and psychological.
Employers speak of skills shortages while candidates struggle to decode what “job-ready” truly means. Recruiters prioritise speed, but applicants crave transparency. Organisations say they value potential, yet automated systems often reward keyword precision over nuanced experience. AI can streamline processes. It cannot resolve contradictions.
In fact, when poorly governed, it can widen them, filtering out unconventional candidates, reinforcing historical hiring patterns, and privileging polished digital profiles over raw promise.
Efficiency versus empathy
The real risk is not that AI will take over hiring. It is that hiring will become overly optimised. Recruitment, at its core, is an act of judgment under uncertainty. It requires reading between lines, interpreting ambition, and sometimes taking a bet on potential. Algorithms excel at pattern recognition; they struggle with intuition.
India’s enthusiasm for AI may give it a competitive edge in efficiency. The next challenge will be safeguarding empathy.
Indeed’s research positions India ahead in acceptance. The harder question is whether that acceptance will be accompanied by robust oversight, clear guidelines, bias audits, and transparent communication to candidates about how AI shapes decisions.
A shift in mindset, not just method
What the data ultimately reveals is a mindset shift. In many parts of the world, AI in hiring is framed as a threat to fairness. In India, it appears to be framed as a tool for access.
That difference matters. For a country where scale defines every system, from education to employment, technological mediation often feels inevitable. The debate has moved from ideological resistance to practical deployment.
But leadership in adoption is not the same as leadership in ethics. As AI becomes embedded in recruitment pipelines, the responsibility intensifies.
If India has moved beyond asking whether to use AI, the next, more difficult question awaits: can it use AI without eroding the human core of hiring?
The answer will not be found in code. It will be found in how employers choose to balance efficiency with judgment, and how much transparency candidates demand in return.Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!
Popular from Education
- CBSE Class 10 English question paper 2026: Download PDF, students call exam easy
- PNRC result 2026 declared at pnrconline.in; download November NPME exam scores here
- Gen Z's parents are calling recruiters, joining job interviews and negotiating salaries: Why are young professionals not taking the reins of their own careers?
- $22bn valuation to bankruptcy and missing $533mn: How Byju's unravelled across two continents
- RBI Office Attendant admit card 2026 released: Direct link to download call letter here
end of article
Trending Stories
- CBSE Class 10 English paper analysis 2026 live updates: Students and teachers find paper easy, NCERT-based
- JEE Main paper 2 final answer key released at jeemain.nta.ac.in: Direct link to download here
- TS Inter 1st Year English exam on February 27: From literature to grammar, a complete last-minute revision guide
- Maharashtra HSC exam leak 2026: Two arrested in Nagpur after WhatsApp circulation; no re-examination to be conducted
- CUET UG 2026 registration window reopens: Apply online before this date, check direct link
- UP Board UPMSP Class 10 English paper analysis 2026: Direct textbook questions make exam easier; download PDF here
- MCL recruitment 2026: Notification released for 667 technical and non-technical posts, apply online March 16 onwards
Featured in education
- UP Board UPMSP Class 10 English paper analysis 2026: Direct textbook questions make exam easier; download PDF here
- RBI Office Attendant admit card 2026 released: Direct link to download call letter here
- UPMSP Class 12 Maths, Biology exams 2026 analysis: Lengthy Maths, moderate Biology; download PDFs here
- Harvard admissions lawsuit sparks debate: Here’s why academic merit matters more than ever for Ivy League hopefuls
- Gujarat Police releases provisional list for 472 Unarmed PSI posts, cut-offs announced; check here
- Assam SLET Admit Card 2026 released at sletneonline.co.in, exam on March 15
Photostories
- 6 Sacred names of Lord Kartikeya and what they symbolize
- Hindu Mythology Quiz: Know the answers
- Sanjay Leela Bhansali birthday special: Masterpieces like 'Khamoshi,' 'Devdas,' and 'Gangubai Kathiawadi' to stream on OTT
- Benefits of keeping Peacock feather in office
- 5 most expensive streets in the world with skyrocketing real estate prices
- 10000 kg rotten dates and 13972 litres of adulterated oil seized in Kanpur: FSSAI's oil purity tests to try at home
- Dipika Kakar celebrates 8th wedding anniversary with Shoaib Ibrahim amid new health scare; says, 'While dealing with cancer, recurrence brings many thoughts about family, kids'
- 5 performance features that define a true adventure motorbike
- Inside India's 4th Richest NRI Anil Agarwal’s Mayfair Residence: Where heritage architecture meets modern innovation
- Ramadan 2026:How to make Bawarchi-style Mutton Dal Gosht for dinner
Up Next
Start a Conversation
Post comment