Microsoft is stepping up to tackle AI’s global divide with a landmark $50 billion pledge for the Global South by decade’s end. Unveiled Wednesday by top executives Brad Smith and Natasha Crampton, the plan addresses the alarming trend where AI use in wealthier nations outpaces developing regions by almost two-to-one.
In their insightful blog, the leaders highlighted how this chasm threatens economic progress and AI’s transformative potential worldwide. ‘The gap is widening, impacting not just growth but the technology’s ability to create universal prosperity,’ they noted.
At the India AI Impact Summit, Smith likened the issue to past electricity disparities that widened North-South economic gaps. He stressed immediate action to prevent AI from exacerbating inequalities over the coming century.
Central to the rollout is India’s ‘Elevate for Educators’ initiative, set to upskill 2 million teachers across 200,000+ institutions. In collaboration with government bodies, it promises AI literacy for 8 million students, building a confident workforce for tomorrow.
Complementing this, Microsoft invested $8 billion+ in Global South data centers last year, fueling expansions in key regions like India and Africa. India’s GitHub community, second-largest worldwide with 24 million developers, boasts 36% yearly growth since 2020—outpacing all top-30 economies.
This comprehensive strategy positions Microsoft as a catalyst for equitable AI advancement, potentially unlocking unprecedented opportunities in education, infrastructure, and innovation for billions in the Global South.