MDDI 演讲稿 · 2026-03-20
杨莉明部长在数码领袖加速训练营启动招待会上的演讲
Speech by Minister Josephine Teo at the Digital Leaders Accelerator Bootcamp Launch Reception
要点
- • 总理亲自出任「全国 AI 理事会」主席——不是顾问角色,而是把这件事的层级抬上去:技术扩散到经济社会各角落从不容易,需要顶层力量来对抗「少数前沿企业拉开差距、长尾掉队」的常态。
- • 新加坡 AI 三个层次:4 项国家级 AI 任务(先进制造、金融、连接、医疗)+ 60 多个 AI Centres of Excellence + 「Champions of AI」+ 国家 AI Impact 计划(瞄准长尾 1 万家中小企业)。
- • 目标培养 10 万名「AI 双语」人才,从会计、法律开始,再扩展到其他专业团体。
- • AI 落地要的是 3C:信心(Confidence)、能力(Capability)、关怀(Care)——AI 已经把许多技能从「买」变成「自己造」,组织能否自建能力是关键。
- • Digital Leaders Accelerator Bootcamp(DLAB)是 Digital Leaders Programme 的升级版,3 年内目标覆盖近 2000 家企业;首批合作方是 BCG 与 EY Parthenon,第一期已报满。
- • Josephine 用「城市景观」做类比:新加坡不要「只有几栋摩天楼的水泥森林」式 AI 生态,要让「AI 心脏地带」(heartlands)也充满活力。
完整译文(中文)
MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期:2026-05-02
感谢各位出席「数码领袖加速训练营」(Digital Leaders Accelerator Bootcamp)的启动仪式。我很高兴和大家一起。
在来这里的路上,我正在听 BBC 的一档广播节目。
节目谈到人们怎么用 AI。其中讲到一个人在私人生活中的故事:他借助 AI 帮助患有失智症的年长母亲,重温过去生活的片段,以此与家人互动、把记忆的一部分找回来。这是一种用法。
一位同事刚从英国一个 AI 工作坊回来,告诉我同场的不少参与者一直在关注新加坡发生的事。
事实上,他们读了我们总理在预算演说中关于 AI 的那一段——其中相当全面地谈到了 AI,包括他将亲自担任新加坡「全国 AI 理事会」(National AI Council)主席这一宣布。
在国会预算与拨款总目辩论期间,一位国会议员问我:「总理领导全国 AI 理事会是什么意义?是顾问角色吗?」
我告诉他,总理是非常忙碌的人。我们感谢他给我们建议与指引,但当总理出任全国 AI 理事会主席时,意味着整件事的层级被抬上去了。
为什么?因为我们从历史中知道,任何一项技术、任何一波技术的扩散,要触达经济与社会最远端的角落都不容易。
实际发生的是:少数前沿企业能充分利用这项技术,把同行甩在身后;剩下一长串「技术落后者」——还没搞清楚怎么用,或者不知道这项技术对自己有什么好处。技术扩散的挑战非常真实。
新加坡对 AI 的愿景是:让许多公司及其员工从 AI 中受益,而不是只有少数。我们正在探索实现这一目标的途径。
在「全国 AI 理事会」之下,我们有「国家级 AI 任务」(National AI Missions),围绕四大支柱推动深度转型——先进制造、金融服务、连接(connectivity),以及医疗健康。
我们还有「Champions of AI」计划,建立在新加坡过去两年发展起来的 60 多个「AI 卓越中心」(AI Centres of Excellence, CoE)基础之上。
这些项目通过全国 AI 理事会推动到议程的最前端——但我们不止于此。
我们还有「全国 AI Impact 计划」(National AI Impact Programme),它聚焦在所谓的「长尾」上。
我们要在至少 1 万家公司——主要是中小企业(SME)——之间制造势能,并培育起一支专家核心。
这些人,我们称他们为「AI 双语者」(AI bilinguals):在自身专业领域有深厚知识,同时也在 AI 上获得熟悉度与流利度,让他们在两件事上都「双语」。
我们瞄准的数字不小——约 10 万名「AI 双语者」。我们将从会计、法律这类专业起步,再与其他专业团体合作进一步扩展。
在全国 AI 理事会之下,我们用这些活动与努力为采用工作注入动能,确保新加坡的 AI 生态在广度与深度上同时建立起来。这就是全国 AI 理事会要做的事。
至于我们所依托的基础——除了 AI 卓越中心之外,新加坡的广泛使用情况也令人鼓舞。
我们四分之三的劳动力报告说他们在使用 AI 工具——不论老板知不知道。
今早有人发给我一篇 LinkedIn 文章:Anthropic 公司的 Claude 报告显示,全球范围内 Claude 使用率最高的两个国家是以色列和新加坡。所以在「基础」这一层,我们底子扎实、势头不错。
再来看较大型的企业——至少 60% 报告以某种方式在使用 AI。
用来处理客户咨询?提升财务部门的效率?还是用于代码开发?都有。
但当我们看中小企业时——使用率就低得多。约 15%,大概是大型企业的四分之一。
话虽如此,对比 2023 年——当时中小企业的 AI 使用率只有约 5%。
从 5% 增长三倍到 15% 左右——方向显然是对的。我们要确保中小企业也有能力跟上。
我们与一线公司以及帮助这些公司落地 AI 的中介互动时注意到一件事:而且在 AI 时代越来越明显——技术准备好了,人却还没准备好。不只是员工,还有老板。
老板们不知道怎么做才是对的;又或者,老板们觉得在迈下一步之前,必须更好地理解机会与风险。
因此,「数码领袖加速训练营」就是为帮助像在座各位这样的老板们「准备好」。
关于 AI 准备度,有三个方面。
第一,你需要对前进方向有信心。你需要相信——
这些工具可以在某些方面帮你;
你知道风险在哪里;
也知道在哪里可以求助。
建立有信心的领导者,是一切的基础。
第二个方面是能力。知道要做什么只是答案的一部分;你还要知道——
如何推进;
如何识别合适的用例,从而提升成功的机会;
如何建立一个飞轮——不只是第一个项目成功率最高,而是搭建一个能让你持续创新的系统。
这就是我们追求的——信心与能力。但我想加一个方面:我相信它应当成为新加坡推动 AI 落地的特色。
第三个方面是关怀(care)。我们希望在推进时,认真考虑这件事对员工的影响,以及客户对 AI 使用的感受。
我们要关心其他利益相关方——比如供应商,以及其他可能因我们如何选择使用 AI 而受影响的人。
我们要认真思考如何设计正确的安全措施,并确保受这项技术影响的人会觉得这是一种有意义的互动——而不是为了 AI 而 AI。
我想起在《哈佛商业评论》读到的一篇关于 AI 时代再培训的文章。其中一个观点是:作为公司,我们习惯用「买」的方式向前走——买技能、买专长。
但你想要的很多东西——如果到市场上说「我就想从货架上买现成的」——要么还不存在,要么存在但形态不适合你。所以我们必须更具战略性地思考「build(自建)」。
AI 是那种被人称为「具有民主化效应」的技术。如果你知道怎么用它,这话很大程度上是真的。
所以,在你组织里建立能力、培养人——让他们能持续使用这项技术——本身就是一个重要的机会。
我们不再只能看市场上有什么、然后买现成。我们现在有能力在内部「自建」,把它做成你成功故事里反复出现的一部分。
所以,「数码领袖加速训练营」——我知道它会占用各位日常的时间,但我希望大家试一试,去发现自己如何能更「准备好」——通过建立信心、建立能力、并以关怀的方式去做,让你的事业能年复一年地保持成功。
我们瞄准的规模有多大?「数码领袖加速训练营」(DLAB)是「数码领袖计划」(Digital Leaders Programme)的升级版——后者已经惠及超过 600 家公司。
我们的目标是把这个数字翻三倍以上,未来 3 年内逼近 2000 家。DLAB 将聚焦 AI。
政府不会单打独斗。我们一直发现,与伙伴合作要有效得多。所以我很高兴,我们一开始就有两个合作伙伴来运行训练营——波士顿咨询集团(BCG)与 EY Parthenon,两位非常优秀的伙伴。我相信第一期下周开课,并且已经报满。
我也想说,我们对更多伙伴持开放态度,形式可以多样。
比如关于员工再培训,我们非常希望与全国职工总会(NTUC)合作——它一直是政府的传统伙伴。
今天与会的还有一些行业协会与商会(TACs)。
如果他们来自食品制造业,我们可以问:使用 AI 的正确方式是什么?哪些是高潜力领域?作为一个行业群体而非单打独斗,他们可以共同做些什么?
在制造业,行业层级的 AI 卓越中心发现:几乎所有精密工程公司都要维护 CNC 机床。但「预测性维护」不是每家公司能轻松独立搞定的。于是他们走到一起,专门为 CNC 机床的预测性维护构建了一个共享 AI 模型。
这些都是可落地的实务——不一定要在企业层级单独做,也可以在同一行业内的多家公司之间一起做。
所以,我们也欢迎与行业协会合作。
最后,所有这些努力到位之后,我们希望看到怎样的 AI 图景?
如果让我用物理世界做类比——那就是我们的城市景观。
有时旅行时,我们会看到一些地方有摩天大楼组成的水泥森林。但在那些摩天楼之外,几乎看不到别的。你不觉得这座城市值得享受、不觉得它生机勃勃。
如果把这种城市图景搬到 AI 的语境里——这不是新加坡想要的:不是只有几栋摩天楼的水泥森林。
我们关心的是数字领域与 AI 生态的「心脏地带」(heartlands)。我们要确保这些地带同样充满活力、同样热闹,是社区蓬勃生长的地方。
在物理世界里,我们的做法是——新加坡的「心脏地带」有「家居改善计划」、「社区翻新计划」、「社区改善计划」、「小贩中心提升计划」——你想得到的我们都有。
在 AI 与数字领域,我们也将秉持完全相同的精神——让你在数字与 AI 的版图上无论转向何方,都看到欣欣向荣的社区与从业者群体,他们善用这项技术,给所涉及的人、员工与组织带来益处。
在此,我再次感谢各位与我们一起,建设一个每个角落都生机勃勃的 AI 图景,确保 AI 的「心脏地带」同样充满活力。
英文原文
MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期:2026-05-02
Thank you for being part of the Digital Leaders Accelerator Bootcamp launch. I am very happy to join you.
When I was on my way here, I was listening to a BBC programme on the radio.
This programme talked about how people are using AI. It shared the story of a person who, in a personal context, has found AI helpful in assisting his elderly mother, who is dealing with dementia, to glimpse her past life as a way of interacting with her family and bringing part of her memory back. That's one type of use.
A colleague was just in the UK for a workshop on AI and came back telling me that among the other participants, a good number had been paying attention to what was happening in Singapore.
In fact, they read the speech that our Prime Minister made during his budget statement, which had a comprehensive treatment of AI, including the announcement that he would personally chair Singapore's National AI Council.
During the debate on the Budget and the Committee of Supply in Parliament, a Member of Parliament (MP) asked me: “What is the significance of the Prime Minister leading Singapore's National AI Council? Is it meant to be an advisory role?”
I told him that the Prime Minister is a very busy person. We appreciate him for giving us advice and guidance, but when the Prime Minister chairs the National AI Council, it means that the entire effort is being elevated.
Why? Because we know historically that with any technology, any wave or diffusion of that technology, reaching the furthest corners of the economy and society is not easy.
What happens is that you have relatively few companies at the frontier who can take full advantage of the technology, and then they pull ahead, leaving behind a long tail of technology laggards – companies that haven't quite figured it out, or organisations that don't know what to do with the technology or how to benefit from it. The challenge of technology diffusion is a very real one.
Singapore's vision for AI is to ensure that many companies and their employees benefit from AI, not just a few. We are exploring ways to achieve this.
Regarding the programmes we are organising under the National AI Council, there are the National AI Missions, where we have identified four pillars for extensive transformation. These pillars are advanced manufacturing, financial services, connectivity, as well as healthcare
We also have a Champions of AI programme, building on the more than 60 AI Centres of Excellence (CoE) developed in Singapore over the last two years.
These programmes are at the forefront of our agenda through the National AI Council, but we are not stopping there.
We also have the National AI Impact Programme, which focuses on what is referred to as the long tail.
We are trying to build momentum amongst at least 10,000 companies, primarily small and medium enterprises (SME), and build up a core of expertise.
These are people that we call AI bilinguals, meaning they are skilled with deep knowledge of their specific domains, and are also acquiring familiarity and fluency in AI that makes them bilingual in these two areas.
The number we are targeting is not small. We are looking for about 100,000 AI bilinguals, and we will start with professions like accountancy and legal, then work with other professional bodies to extend this further.
Under the National AI Council, we have these activities and efforts intended to give the adoption effort greater momentum, and to ensure we build both breadth and depth in Singapore’s AI ecosystem. That is what the National AI Council is intended to do.
Regarding the foundations we are building on, apart from the AI Centres of Excellence, broad usage in Singapore is encouraging.
Three-quarters of our workforce have reported using AI tools, with or without their boss' knowledge.
Someone sent me a LinkedIn article this morning stating that Claude from Anthropic reported that worldwide, the two countries with the highest usage of Claude are Israel and Singapore. So at the foundation level, we are strong with good momentum.
Then, when we look at larger firms, at least 60% of them report using AI in some way.
Is it for handling customer queries? Is it for improving their efficiency in the finance function or perhaps for code development itself?
But when we look at SMEs – the usage rate is much less. It is closer to 15%, which is about a quarter of the usage rate in larger firms.
Having said that, compared to just 2023, AI usage in SMEs was around 5% then.
From 5%, to a threefold increase to around 15% -- the direction is definitely correct. We want to make sure that SMEs also have the ability to move forward.
One thing we notice amongst the companies we interact with, as well as the intermediaries that help these companies implement AI, is this: very often, and increasingly in the age of AI, the technology is ready, but people may not be ready. Not just the employees, but bosses too.
Bosses who do not know what the right ways are to go about it, or bosses who feel that they need a better grasp of the opportunities and the risks before they move to the next step.
Hence, the Digital Leaders Accelerator Bootcamp is meant to help bosses like yourselves become ready.
Regarding AI readiness, there are three areas.
First, you need confidence about the direction forward. You need to have confidence:
that the tools can help you in certain ways;
that you know what the risks are;
and to know who you can go to for help.
It is foundational that we build confident leaders.
The second aspect is capability. Knowing what to do is part of the answer, but you need to know:
how to proceed;
how to identify the right use cases, which improves your chances of success;
and how to build a flywheel so that it's not just the first project that has the highest chance of success, but you are building a system that allows you to innovate continuously.
So that is what we are pursuing -- confidence and capability. But I want to add one more aspect which I believe should distinguish how we approach AI adoption and implementation in Singapore.
The third aspect is care. We want to do it in a way that considers the impact on employees and how customers feel about the use of AI.
We need to care for other stakeholders, for example, our suppliers and others we interact with, who could be affected by how we choose to use AI.
We have to think carefully about the right ways to design safeguards, and how we will ensure that people impacted by this technology will find it a meaningful interaction and not just implementing AI for the sake of it.
I'm reminded of an article I read in the Harvard Business Review, which was about re-skilling in the age of AI. One of the points made is that as companies, we are accustomed to buying things to move forward, such as skills and expertise.
But, a lot of what you are looking for – if you go to the market and say: “I just want to buy it off the shelf” -- either doesn't exist yet, or it exists in a form that is not customised to your needs. Thus, we need to think much more strategically about build.
AI is one of those technologies that people say has a democratising effect. This is true to a significant extent if you know how to use it.
So, building the capabilities and the people in your organisation to use this technology continuously is, in fact, a significant opportunity.
We are no longer limited to looking at what the market offers and buying it off the shelf, but we are looking at the ability to build it in-house and make this part of your success story, that gets repeated over and over again.
So, the Digital Leaders Accelerator Bootcamp – I know it takes time away from your regular priorities, but I'd like to urge you to give it a go and discover how you can be more ready – by building confidence, building capabilities, and doing it carefully to enable your business success to continue year after year.
What is the scale that we are aiming for? The Digital Leaders Accelerator Bootcamp (DLAB) is an enhancement of the Digital Leaders Programme, which has benefited more than 600 companies.
Our aim is to more than triple that, to closer to 2,000 over the next three years, and the DLAB will focus on AI.
The Government will not do this alone. We have always found it much more effective to work with partners. So, I am pleased that for running the bootcamp, we have two partners to start with. They are the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) and EY Parthenon -- two very good partners. I believe that the first bootcamp starts next week, and it is already fully subscribed.
Let me say that we are open to having more partners, in different ways.
For example, regarding employee reskilling, we are very keen to work with the National Trades Union Congress, a traditional partner of the Government.
We also have with us today some Trade Associations and Chambers (TACs).
If they are in the food manufacturing sector, we can ask what are the right ways of using AI? What are some high-potential areas, and what can they potentially do together as a community, rather than individually?
In manufacturing, the AI CoEs at the sectoral level found that almost all precision engineering companies need to maintain their CNC machines. But predictive maintenance is not something that each company can work out easily on its own. So, they came together to build a common AI model specifically to figure out predictive maintenance of CNC machines.
These are practical things that can be done, not necessarily only at the enterprise level, but across a cluster of companies within the same industry.
So, we will be open to partnering with TACs too.
Finally, with all of these efforts in place, what sort of AI landscape do we hope to see?
If I could draw a parallel to what we see in the physical world, it would be our cityscape.
Sometimes when we travel, we see places where there are skyscrapers that are part of the concrete jungle. But beyond those skyscrapers, you don't see very much else. You don't feel like you enjoy the city, and that it is full of life.
That sort of landscape in a city context, if you transpose it to an AI landscape, is not what we want to see in Singapore – not a concrete jungle with only a few skyscrapers.
We are interested in the heartlands of the digital domain and our AI ecosystem. We are interested in ensuring that these are equally vibrant, lively, and are places where communities thrive.
The way to approach it in the physical domain is that in Singapore’s heartlands, we have the Home Improvement Programme, a neighbourhood renewal programme, a community improvement programme, and a hawker centre upgrading programme -- you name it, we have it.
It is exactly the same ethos that we will bring to the AI and digital landscape – so that wherever you turn in our digital and AI domain, you will see thriving neighbourhoods and communities of practitioners that make good use of this technology to bring benefit to the people, employees, and organisations involved.
On that note, I thank you once again for working with us to build this AI landscape that is vibrant in every corner and ensuring that the AI heartland is just as vibrant.