The Silent Revolution of Agentic AI Transforming HR Practices in Sri Lanka
Agentic AI means a self-directed system that can make
decisions, carry out multi-step tasks, and learn from results without constant
human supervision, which takes actions in contrast to conventional AI systems
that provide answers, such as end-to-end recruitment pipelines, real-time
employee sentiment analysis, and predictive attrition modeling in HR. So with this emerging trend, the Sri Lankan
labor force has also fallen at a decisive moment where Human resource
management is no longer essential to rely on outdated procedures, given that
there are over 8.8 million people in the labor market (Department of Census and Statistics, 2023), while the youth
unemployment rate was 26.1% (World Bank,
2023).
Moreover, assistance that would be utilized by Agentic AI is being utilized by the
current IT industry in Sri Lanka, which accounts for about 7.4% of the
country's GDP (SLASSCOM, 2023). As in a global trend, most IT companies like
IFS and Millennium IT have used this technique, where they have used AI-driven
screening techniques, which have resulted in reducing time-to-hire by up to 40%
(Chowdhury et al., 2023).
Not only for the screening purpose, the IT sector, the Sri Lankan Textile Industry, which employs over 350,000 people, is also being investigated to utilize this technology to handle shift scheduling, grievance processing, and compliance tracking. Besides, Adoption is accelerated by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka's Financial Sector Modernization strategy, which encourages banks and insurers to use AI agents for performance management and personnel planning (Central Bank of Sri Lanka, 2024).
However, the real threat connected to such technology has caused an increase in job displacement, algorithmic prejudice in hiring, and erosion of worker privacy, where Sri Lanka cannot overlook the ILO's projection that automation might impact 56% of wage employment in ASEAN countries (Chang and Huynh, 2016). The nation's Personal Data Protection Act (2022) has not yet been fully implemented in HR situations, and regulatory frameworks are still in their infancy.
Conclusion
Although Agentic AI
is already changing Sri Lankan workplaces, far-off upheaval. The directive for
HR professionals is clear: support human-centered governance while
strategically embracing technology by promoting a balance between automation
and empathy, which will not only endure but will also shape Sri Lankan
employment in the future.
References
Central Bank of Sri Lanka (2024) Annual Report 2023.
Colombo: Central Bank of Sri Lanka.
Chang, J. and Huynh, P. (2016) ASEAN in
Transformation: The Future of Jobs at Risk of Automation. Geneva:
International Labour Organization.
Chowdhury, S., Dey, P. and Joel-Edgar, S. (2023)
'Unlocking the value of artificial intelligence in human resource management
through AI capability framework', Human Resource Management Review,
33(1), p. 100899.
Department of Census and Statistics (2023). Sri
Lanka Labour Force Survey: Annual Report 2022. Colombo: DCS.
SLASSCOM (2023) Sri Lanka IT-BPM Industry Annual
Report 2023. Colombo: Sri Lanka Association of Software and Service
Companies.
World Bank (2023) Sri Lanka Economic Update:
Navigating the Polycrisis. Washington, DC: World Bank Group.

This is a very insightful and forward-looking post on agentic AI. You clearly explain its emerging impact well. Do you think agentic AI will mainly enhance HR decision-making in Sri Lanka, or could it eventually replace some traditional HR roles altogether?
ReplyDeleteThank you for your valuable feedback. I believe Agentic AI will mainly enhance HR decision-making in Sri Lanka rather than fully replace HR roles. It will take over repetitive and data-heavy tasks like screening, scheduling, and analytics, but human judgment will still be essential for areas like employee relations, ethics, and culture. So, instead of replacement, we are likely to see role transformation in HR.
DeleteThis is a very thought-provoking discussion on agentic AI that clearly highlights how autonomous AI systems are quietly transforming HR by moving beyond simple automation to proactive decision-making and execution across complex workflows.
ReplyDeleteHowever, how can HR ensure proper governance, transparency, and ethical control when agentic AI systems are capable of making independent decisions that directly impact employees?
The distinction between traditional AI and self directed Agentic AI is a critical point that often gets overlooked in these discussions. While a 40% reduction in time-to-hire is impressive for our IT sector, your concern regarding the Personal Data Protection Act (2022) is very well-placed. Without a mature regulatory framework, algorithmic prejudice could easily go unchecked in Sri Lanka. It suggests that while we embrace the efficiency, the human-centered governance" you mentioned must be our priority to prevent automation from simply automating bias.
ReplyDeleteThe article explains how Agentic AI is changing HR practices in Sri Lanka in a clear and informative way. It shows both the benefits, like faster hiring and better management, and the risks, such as job loss and privacy issues. The use of examples makes the topic easy to understand. However, some sentences could be simpler for better clarity. Overall, it is an interesting and relevant discussion.
ReplyDelete