For India’s startup founders, the creation of the AI Governance and Economic Group (AIGEG) is not just another policy headline. It signals the country’s first serious attempt to stitch together a fragmented regulatory landscape where seven ministries issued overlapping advisories with no single authority to resolve conflicts. What looks like an advisory panel is in fact a structural experiment: can India build a central node that balances innovation with liability, and job displacement with digital ambition? The deeper story is whether startups gain breathing space to innovate, or whether the absence of binding law leaves them exposed to sudden regulatory shocks. In this Vishleshan, we decode AIGEG’s mandate, track its implications for India’s AI economy, and assess if this advisory body can evolve into the institutional backbone of real AI legislation.
Context: India’s AI startup ecosystem is the third-largest in the world — over 3,000 active AI startups, ₹10,371 crore in public AI investment, and a digital economy projected to hit $1 trillion by 2030. Yet until April 2026, these startups operated in a regulatory vacuum — no statutory definition of an “AI system,” no risk classification framework, no clear liability structure. On April 16, 2026, the government formally constituted the AI Governance and Economic Group (AIGEG) — India’s first apex inter-ministerial body for AI governance — to begin filling that gap. This is not a law. It is the institutional architecture that precedes one. The article asks the right question: Does anything actually change for startups today — and what should they prepare for tomorrow?
Link to the Article: Mint
India’s AI regulatory journey began not with a law but with a principle. In November 2025, MeitY released India’s AI Governance Guidelines — a voluntary, principle-based framework built around seven “Sutras” anchoring safety, transparency, equity, and innovation. These guidelines were aspirational, not enforceable. What was missing was the institutional engine to translate those principles into coordinated policy. AI Governance and Economic Group (AIGEG) fills that gap.
India’s first apex inter-ministerial advisory body for AI policy — a central coordination node that aligns how ministries, regulators, and industry approach artificial intelligence.
Nature: Advisory. Non-binding. It does not create law, cannot fine companies, and has no licensing authority — yet.
Composition:
Why it exists: India’s AI governance was fragmented across at least seven ministries — MeitY, Health, Finance, Labour, Commerce, Education, and Legal Affairs — each issuing sector-specific advisories with no coordination mechanism. A startup building AI for healthcare faced simultaneously the DPDP Act, IT Rules, Clinical Establishments Act, and CDSCO guidelines — with no single authority to resolve conflicts between them. AIGEG is the structural answer to that fragmentation.
AIGEG’s mandate breaks into five distinct functions:
1. No enforcement, no urgency: AIGEG has no power to fine, license, or sanction. Without an enforcement arm, its classification framework is a recommendation that companies are free to contest or ignore until legislation converts it into law.
2. DPDP Rules are still pending: The DPDP Act was passed in 2023. Its implementing rules — which determine the actual compliance obligations for data fiduciaries — have not been notified as of April 2026. AIGEG cannot resolve AI-specific data liability ambiguity until the foundational rules beneath it are published.
3. Sector regulators may move faster and inconsistently: RBI’s AI-fraud framework, SEBI’s RAIDAR surveillance tool, and IRDAI’s AI underwriting guidelines are all being developed in parallel — without coordination with AIGEG. The result could be three different AI liability standards for a fintech startup offering insurance-linked credit products.
4. Labour mapping and innovation promotion are structurally in tension: A body mandated to protect jobs from AI disruption and simultaneously promote AI innovation will eventually face recommendations that contradict each other. How AIGEG navigates that tension will define the political character of India’s AI law — and that navigation will not be purely technocratic.
AIGEG’s first substantive output — the Deploy/Pilot/Defer classification criteria — is the immediate deliverable to watch. If published within 90 days, it signals institutional seriousness. If it slips into FY27 without output, the body risks becoming another consultative process without consequence. Simultaneously, the DPDP Rules notification remains the single most important pending action for AI startups — every month of delay deepens the compliance ambiguity AIGEG is meant to resolve. The EU AI Act’s high-risk provisions come into force in August 2026, creating external pressure on Indian startups with European exposure to build compliance architecture that India’s own law does not yet require. As one policy architect put it privately: India is not behind on AI governance — it is choosing to be last so it can be right. The question is whether “right” arrives before the first major AI-caused harm forces the answer.
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