India, Jan. 5 -- Artificial intelligence is now embedded in everyday work across the world. Lawyers draft contracts with it, programmers debug code with it, consultants prepare presentations with it, students learn with it, and bureaucracies quietly experiment with it. India is no exception. From startups in Bengaluru to Government departments piloting AI-enabled systems, adoption is rising steadily.And yet, when economists and policymakers look at the headline numbers, the story appears strangely flat. Productivity growth remains modest. GDP has not surged. Wages have not jumped. The long-promised "AI dividend" seems delayed, if not absent. This has led to a familiar conclusion: perhaps artificial intelligence is being oversold. A more u...