A quiet revolution in public life
A recent turn in the conversation — that AI may reshape not just jobs but how government works — felt to me like an invitation rather than a prediction. I have watched these threads for years: from regulation and voluntary compliance to the idea of building domestic models and governance frameworks. This moment asks a different question: if our institutions were designed for the industrial age, how do they adapt to an era where decision-making itself can be augmented, accelerated, and automated?
What I see happening
- Workflows become policy instruments. AI will make routine administrative decisions faster and more consistent. That’s good when it reduces friction and waste; it is dangerous when it obscures accountability.
- Information ecosystems change. Governments that once controlled distribution of information now must operate inside a public sphere shaped by models that summarize, prioritize, and sometimes hallucinate.
- New service modalities emerge. Personalized benefit delivery, predictive maintenance of public infrastructure, and conversational government channels will change citizen expectations about responsiveness.
- Regulatory architecture strains. Laws written for manual processes struggle to keep pace with systems that learn and change.
My concerns (and hopes)
I am hopeful because these technologies can make state services more humane and more efficient. I am concerned because the same technologies can concentrate power, entrench bias, and create brittle systems that appear fair but are opaque.
Key concerns I return to repeatedly:
- Accountability: When a model recommends a decision, who signs the paper? Who is liable?
- Auditability: Can my fellow citizens and independent auditors inspect the reasoning?
- Distributional impact: Which communities win and which lose when automation replaces discretion?
- Incentives: How will procurement, vendor lock-in, and commercial pressures shape the public interest?
What public institutions should do — in plain terms
- Build capacity before delegation
- Train civil servants to use AI tools and to question them. Procurement of capability must come with investment in human judgement.
- Require explainability and audit trails
- Deploy systems that produce logs an auditor can read. Not mystifying black boxes deployed behind legal fictions of “trade secret.”
- Standardize third-party audits
- A regular, independent audit regime for public AI systems should be non-negotiable — like safety checks for bridges.
- Protect democratic information flows
- Invest in public-interest models (and datasets) so that information shaping civic life isn’t wholly controlled by private monopolies.
- Design for contestability
- Every automated decision that affects rights or benefits should have a straightforward human review process.
Where my past thinking connects
I have written about the need for a regulatory and auditing framework for AI and argued that technology leaps must be accompanied by governance How to regulate AI ? Let it decide for itself ?. More recently I urged building national capabilities and oversight as countries design indigenous models and strategies Learning from DeepSeek, honing India's AI strategy. These are not abstract positions — they are practical guardrails for a moment when governments will both adopt and be rewritten by AI.
A short, practical test for any AI-powered government service
Before a public AI system goes live, ask these four questions:
- Is the decision-making pathway auditable end-to-end?
- Can affected individuals easily appeal and receive human review?
- Who benefits financially from the deployment, and how is vendor influence controlled?
- Is there a sunset clause and continuous monitoring plan?
If you cannot answer these with confidence, delay deployment and fix the gaps.
An invitation to think bigger
AI will not only change how permits are issued or benefits are distributed. It will reshape how citizens expect to be heard, how politicians campaign, how regulators spot systemic risk, and how trust is earned and lost. That makes this a civic moment, not just a technological one.
Policymakers should treat AI as a structural change: invest in public data, public models, and public auditing infrastructure. Civil society must insist on transparency. Technologists must build with humility.
I remain optimistic because technology, when paired with accountable institutions, can widen participation and make government more responsive. But optimism without frameworks is a fast route to brittle systems.
Regards,
Hemen Parekh
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