Artificial Intelligence (AI) is transforming world economies at a fast pace, recasting labor markets, and redrawing the map of the future of work. With more countries investing in AI-based technologies, implications for economic growth and employment dynamics are wide-ranging and deep. This paper attempts a country-level analysis to investigate the nexus between AI adoption, economic growth, and labour market changes with India as a case in point. With an expanding digital economy and a large, young population, India offers a special context in which challenge and opportunity intertwine. The study explores how AI is fostering productivity growth, innovation, and industrial upgrade, yet at the same time upsetting established employment patterns. Through secondary data analysis, policy examination, and expert evaluation in a mixed-methods design, the study assesses sector-wise integration of AI, government efforts, and workforce readiness. Evidence indicates that although AI has the capability to contribute meaningfully to GDP and inclusive growth, it is also threatening in terms of job displacement, skills mismatches, and regional inequalities. Among the important observations is the uneven effect of AI on low-skilled, mundane jobs and increased demand for high-level digital, cognitive, and socio-emotional competencies. The article also discusses how schooling and vocational training programs are reacting to this change, and whether the current reskilling strategies are adequate. Government actions such as the National AI Strategy and public-private partnerships are reviewed for their contribution toward having an AI-ready environment. By offering a detailed, country-level analysis, the report helps to better understand how AI can be utilized to assist sustainable economic growth without excluding parts of the labor force. It underscores the necessity of adaptive policy structures, ongoing learning, and ethical use of AI technologies to provide for equitable progress. The report ends with providing actionable recommendations for policymakers, industry executives, and educators to avoid risks and achieve maximum socio-economic returns from AI.