Nagpur: With Japan’s average age standing at 44 years and India’s at just 22, a golden door of opportunity is opening for young Indians looking to build global careers. This message was the highlight of a special session delivered on Tuesday by Noriaki Abe, minister of political affairs at the embassy of Japan in New Delhi, during his visit to the Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Nagpur.Speaking at the institute’s Indo-Japan Research Centre (IJRC), Abe explained that the two nations formalised an ‘Action Plan for Human Resource Exchange’. Simply put, Japan needs young talent, and India has it in abundance.IIM Nagpur’s IJRC is one of the few dedicated academic centres in the country exclusively focused on translating the India-Japan strategic partnership into actionable research and cross-cultural corporate leadership.Highlighting the sheer financial scale of this partnership, Abe shared a massive update on bilateral economic ties. He revealed that Japan successfully achieved its recent 5-trillion-Yen investment target in India and now boldly upscaled the goal to 10 trillion Yen in private investment.“This 10-trillion-yen target is not just a number on a screen, it represents thousands of new businesses, start-ups, and high-paying career opportunities for Indian professionals in the coming years,” Abe said.So, where are these jobs opening up? Moving beyond traditional manufacturing, the minister detailed specific areas of expansion. Through newly-launched frameworks like the “AI Cooperation Initiative (JAI)” and “Digital Partnership 2.0,” Japan is aggressively seeking Indian talent and collaboration in booming emerging fields such as artificial intelligence, semiconductors, space exploration, and clean energy.Showcasing the intense momentum of this relationship, he revealed that the recent AI summit resulted in over 170 Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) signed by private entities, directly paving the way for corporate hiring and collaboration.“Japan’s corporate culture is undergoing structural changes, making it much more welcoming for Indian youth,” Abe shared. The visiting delegation, which also included CR Jayachandran, senior political advisor at the Japanese Embassy, was welcomed by the IJRC leadership, including chairperson Prof Rahul Kumar Sett and core faculty member Prof Ankita Dash.

