• India
  • Feb 20
  • Sreesha V.M

PM Modi unveils MANAV vision at India-AI Impact Summit

• During his inaugural address at the India-AI Impact Summit, Prime Minister Narendra Modi unveiled the ‘MANAV’ vision for a human-centric approach.

• He encapsulated this human-centric vision in the acronym MANAV, presenting a roadmap where technological advancement progresses in harmony with societal values.

M - Moral and Ethical Systems

A - Accountable Governance

N - National Sovereignty

A - Accessible and Inclusive AI

V - Valid and Legitimate Systems.

• He remarked that India’s vision for AI is clearly reflected in the theme of the summit— ‘Sarvajan Hitaya, Sarvajan Sukhaya’, meaning ‘welfare for all, happiness of all’. 

• India’s MANAV vision reflects an ongoing national commitment to building a strong foundation through coordinated programmes and policy initiatives. 

• These measures translate guiding principles into actionable outcomes across education, digital infrastructure, governance, and innovation ecosystems.

• He underlined that the direction in which humanity takes AI today will determine the future.

• Global leaders including UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, French President Emmanuel Macron, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Swiss President Guy Parmelin, and CEOs from leading technology companies from around the world were among those present at the Summit.

The five pillars of AI vision

1) Moral and Ethical Systems

• The first pillar underscores that AI must be rooted in a strong moral and ethical system. 

• PM Modi emphasised fairness, transparency, and human oversight as non-negotiable principles in AI design and deployment. India is embedding these values early, beginning in classrooms and extending to society at large.

• The National Education Policy 2020 prioritises digital and AI literacy, integrating computational thinking and AI concepts across educational levels. 

• This ensures early exposure to data-driven decision-making and ethical AI principles, fostering a culture of innovation while preparing future-ready citizens for a rapidly evolving technological landscape.

• India set a global benchmark in responsible AI engagement by securing a Guinness World Records title for the highest number of pledges received for an AI responsibility campaign within 24 hours.

2) Accountable Governance

• Transparent rules and robust oversight, reinforces that trust in AI must be anchored in transparency, robust oversight, and clear institutional responsibility.

• At the heart of this vision is the IndiaAI Mission, approved with an outlay exceeding Rs 10,300 crore. This not only strengthens compute, data, skilling, and innovation capacity, but also embeds governance mechanisms into the AI ecosystem from the outset. 

• By institutionalising standards for responsible development, deployment, and monitoring of AI systems, the IndiaAI Mission ensures structured oversight across public-sector applications and emerging technologies.

• Complementing this are India’s AI Governance Guidelines, which establish a people-centric framework rooted in trust, equity, accountability, and fairness. 

• Together, these measures create a transparent regulatory architecture that ensures AI systems in India remain explainable, lawful, and aligned with democratic values and constitutional principles.

3) National Sovereignty

• PM Modi asserted that in an AI-driven world, sovereignty extends beyond territorial boundaries to encompass data, algorithms, and digital infrastructure. 

• For India, this means securing critical datasets, strengthening domestic compute capacity, and fostering indigenous AI model development. 

• Initiatives such as the India Semiconductor Mission, trusted data governance frameworks, and investments in secure digital public infrastructure reflect a commitment to technological self-reliance without digital isolation. 

• By building resilient domestic capabilities in chips, cloud, and advanced technologies, India is ensuring that its AI ecosystem remains globally collaborative yet strategically autonomous, safeguarding economic security and democratic institutions in the age of intelligent systems.

4) Accessible and Inclusive AI

• It affirms that artificial intelligence must serve as a multiplier for society, not a monopoly of a privileged few.

• India’s Digital Public Infrastructure is enabling AI solutions to scale rapidly and affordably across healthcare, education, agriculture, and governance. 

• Platforms such as MeghRaj GI Cloud and the IndiaAI Compute Portal are democratising access to shared computing resources including Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) and Tensor Processing Units (TPUs) significantly lowering entry barriers for startups, researchers, and institutions.

• IndiaAI Kosh provides datasets and AI models across sectors, while the AI Data Labs Network and the National Supercomputing Mission are strengthening grassroots skills and high-performance computing capacity nationwide. 

• Collectively, these initiatives ensure that AI innovation in India remains broad-based, affordable, and inclusive.

5) Valid and Legitimate Systems

• The fifth pillar places trust, safety and legality at the centre of AI deployment. 

• PM Modi underscored that AI systems must be verifiable, lawful, and transparent particularly at a time when deepfakes and synthetic media pose risks to democratic discourse and social trust.

• The Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Amendment Rules, 2026 formally define and regulate synthetically generated content, strengthening accountability in the digital ecosystem.

• At the operational level, the IndiaAI Mission’s Safe and Trusted AI pillar supports projects focused on bias mitigation, privacy-preserving system design, algorithmic auditing tools, and risk assessment frameworks. 

• These safeguards translate ethical intent into enforceable standards, ensuring that AI innovation remains credible, responsible, and socially beneficial.

(The author is a trainer for Civil Services aspirants.)