MDDI 演讲稿 · 2026-04-10
陈杰豪高级政务部长在新加坡电脑协会 AI 大会上的主旨演讲实录
Transcript of SMS Tan Kiat How's Keynote Speech at Singapore Computer Society (SCS) AI Conference
要点
- • AI 不仅在重塑工程师的工作内容(从写代码转向 AI 工具管理、规格设计、治理护栏),也催生了红队、模型评估、对齐、部署等新岗位。
- • 新加坡科技人才需求依然强劲:从 2023 年 20.8 万增至 2024 年 21.4 万,且约 60% 在非科技公司就业,非科技行业的科技岗位增速(3.9%)远超科技公司(1.1%)。
- • AI 抹平传统职业阶梯的「前几级」——但应对方式不是放弃培养新人,而是把这些阶梯改造成「学校与职场之间的桥梁」,由学校、雇主、政府共建端到端路径。
- • TIP Alliance 升级为 TIP Alliance+(Pathway Linking University Students),覆盖工教院、理工学院与大学三类毕业生;与 IMDA、e2i 合作上线 Tech Elevation & Career Hub 一站式职业平台。
- • 推出「领域路径」帮助学生构建 AI 双语能力(AI Bilingualism):从政府(SCS+GovTech)启动,扩展到医疗(SCS+Synapxe),并探索金融(MAS+IBF)。
完整译文(中文)
MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期:2026-05-02
新加坡电脑学会(SCS)会长林美君女士、各位嘉宾、各位同仁:
上午好,星期五愉快。很高兴出席首届 SCS AI 大会——这场会议来得正是时候。
过去两年,关于 AI 的讨论已经发生转变——从生成式 AI 聊天机器人,到多智能体落地;从试用现成的 AI 工具,到围绕 AI 带来的可能性开发业务用例;从在工作场所做 AI 试点,到从根本上重新设计组织流程与工作流,把 AI 能力嵌进去。
围绕 AI 的对话,已经走向更有意义、更深思熟虑、更系统化地落地这项技术。
与此同时,AI 技术本身在飞速发展。有时我们觉得,AI 工具迭代的速度比我们能适应的速度还要快!
可以预见,AI 会颠覆很多既有的商业模式,甚至打乱整个行业。科技行业自己也面临这种颠覆压力。
在大家变得过度焦虑之前,我先讲点好消息:科技人才的需求依然强劲。
IMDA 在 2025 年 10 月发布的《新加坡数字经济报告》显示,我们的科技劳动力从 2023 年的 20.83 万人增长到 2024 年的 21.4 万人。增长最快的角色是 AI 与数据专家,以及网络安全专业人士。
这与人力部最近发布的《2025 年职位空缺报告》相吻合。最受欢迎的岗位包括软件开发、数据分析师与数据科学家。
今天,我们大约 60% 的科技人才受雇于非科技公司——比如银行、物流公司、制造企业。
在 2023 至 2024 年间,这些非科技行业里的科技岗位增长了 3.9%,而科技公司里的同类岗位只增长了 1.1%。我们预计,随着 AI 在各行业加速采用,这个趋势会进一步走强。
好消息是——我们仍然有岗位。而且科技行业的空缺数量超过了能填进去的人。科技人才的需求强劲且稳定,尤其是在那些正在快速数字化、把 AI 引入工作流和组织的非科技行业里。
与此同时,AI 工具正在重塑技术工作的本质。
比如说,初级软件工程师过去是通过写代码来打磨手艺、积累经验。
我记得我 20 多、快 30 年前刚开始工作的时候,我的第一份工作就是写代码。在那里你学会真正在工作场景里运用的基础知识,磨练技能、积累经验,并意识到——并不是所有事情都像教科书里写的那样。
今天,像 Claude、Cursor 这样的 AI 工具,能比有经验的开发者更高效地生成完整的代码块。
GitHub Copilot 不仅能补全代码行,还能补完整个函数。AI 智能体可以按指令执行多步开发任务。
我们在科技岗位的其他方面也看到类似的转变。
比如在网络安全领域,AI 工具如今能帮安全团队快速分诊告警、把事件总结成可执行的发现,并推荐后续调查或修复步骤。
除了重塑科技岗位的本质,AI 也催生了新的角色和机会。
AI 红队成员、模型评估师、对齐研究员、AI 部署工程师——这些都是过去几年里新冒出来的角色。它们不只关注「如何构建 AI 系统」,而是关注如何测试、治理,以及如何在真实环境里安全地部署 AI。
我们在世界各地也看到不少例子:没有科技背景的人借助 AI 工具,启动、自动化并扩张自己的生意——从远程医疗服务,到简历构建工具。但当 AI 拉低了「做一个应用」的门槛,它对我们这些科技专业人士、传统 IT 团队和服务于企业的科技公司,反而把要求抬得更高了。
这对我们意味着什么?
对在座的科技专业人士来说,这不是又一波可以「乘势而上」的创新浪潮。这是对科技行业以及科技相关岗位在未来几年的一次根本性重新想象。
这些趋势引出几个根本性的问题:
在 AI 推进得这么快的情况下,新加坡如何继续走在前列、继续发展科技行业、继续为科技专业人士创造好工作?
如果 AI 已经能完成我们工程师的许多任务——尤其是入门级的初级工作——我们如何继续培养下一代科技专业人士与领导者?面对职业阶梯前几级正在「消失」这个现实,我们该如何回应?
比如,软件工程师的角色将不再止于写代码。新的价值贡献,可能来自更深的工程能力——管理 AI 工具、推动需求规格、做系统设计与优化、确保数据完整性,以及为应对 AI 采用风险设计治理与护栏。
另一个机会,是培养 AI「双语」人才——既懂 AI、也深谙业务领域的工程师。
随着 AI 创新与应用在各行业加速,企业需要能够架接技术与业务知识的科技人才。试点之后,组织真正关心的是投资回报——这个 AI 工具到底有没有用来解决真实业务问题?是否可规模化、成本可控、安全可靠?
这只是我列出的几种可能。重要的是——政府、雇主、科技公司与协会、各高等教育机构(IHL)必须共同回答这些问题。
杨莉明部长已经请我研究这些议题,并制定一套对应方案。接下来几个月,我计划与相关利益相关方接触,并与新加坡电脑学会(SCS)、SGTech、TTAB 等科技行业协会紧密合作,把这件重要的事推下去。
适应与转型,对我们并不陌生。我们在过去的技术浪潮中也这样做过。
1980 年代末到 1990 年代,伴随个人计算机的兴起,我们专注于高价值、资本密集的技术产业,把新加坡建成全球电子产品枢纽。我们培养并发展了 IT 专业人士,并对全经济体的工作者进行再培训,让他们转向以知识为基础的工作。
进入 2000 年代,我们又从制造业为主的经济,转型为充满活力的数字枢纽,并立志成为「智慧国」。我们大力投资构建强大的科技人才基础,他们具备软件工程、云计算与网络安全方面的能力。
最近,在我们更新版的《国家 AI 战略》之下,AI 方面也取得了不错的进展——建立起 AI 实务人才管线,帮助各行业的工作者变得更「AI 流利」。
尽管我计划与利益相关方深入沟通,但我们不会等所有答案都齐了再行动。外部环境与技术趋势演变得太快,我们没有这个时间。
我们务实的做法,是迅速借力并改造现有项目。
一个好例子是 IMDA 的 TechSkills Accelerator(TeSA)。它一直是培养科技专业人士、确保我们的科技劳动力在快速变化的行业中保持相关性的基石项目。自 2016 年以来,TeSA 已为约 24,300 名本地人员对接科技岗位,并为超过 44 万人提供了数据与 AI 等领域的技能提升。
今年早些时候,MDDI 宣布将扩展 TeSA 项目,支持非科技专业人士发展「AI 双语」能力。起步阶段,我们将聚焦那些 AI 介入度高、又服务多个行业的领域,例如会计与法律。
我们也将扩展 2022 年启动的「TeSA for ITE and Polytechnics Alliance」(TIP Alliance)。
TIP Alliance 由行业代表、关键雇主、高等教育机构与政府组成,他们紧密协作,帮助工教院(ITE)与理工学院毕业生改善就业结果,并为学生构建结构化路径,让他们获得真实的工作经验与产业连接。
自启动以来,TIP Alliance 已经促成超过 1,000 个有承诺的科技岗位、超过 2,300 个一年期实习机会,让 ITE 与理工学院学生获得行业相关技能与实战经验。
我也很高兴地告诉大家,已有超过 200 家公司承诺采用「以技能为本」的招聘方式——评估候选人时看的是他们能做什么,而不只是看学历。
TIP Alliance 这几年成绩亮眼。我会扩展 TIP Alliance,回应我前面提到的 AI 趋势。
首先,针对让应届生更好地走进职场——尤其是当 AI 把传统职业阶梯的前几级搅乱时。
对于即将进入职场的学生,我们知道这件事让人发憷。他们会问:如果 AI 能完成基础任务,公司还会不会招应届生?我们在学校里学到的技能,今天在职场上还有用吗?
我和很多应届生聊过——这正是他们的焦虑。有时这种焦虑被放大,但我能理解他们为什么这样想。从校园进入一个非常不同的环境,焦虑是正常的。通过 TIP Alliance,我们已经搭起许多结构化路径与体验,缓解这种焦虑、让毕业生准备得更充分。
我去年开始与 TIP Alliance 的成员就此进行讨论。
成员之间的交流让我很受鼓舞。讨论坦诚、有建设性、富有成效。大家都认同:每个人都得出一份力。我们不能把基础的在岗培训完全推给私营部门——尤其是当 AI 已经把许多入门任务自动化了。
我们也不能让学校只专注于「即时上岗」的技能、而牺牲扎实的基础——后者依旧必要,即便智能体 AI 已经能做许多人能做的事。没有基础,进入职场的学生或毕业生就无法持续再培训、提升技能、终身学习。
这意味着——「巴掌得两只手才拍响」。不是把责任压给雇主,也不是压给学校;而是双方坐到一起,讨论我们能共同做什么。
我们需要的,是一条更刻意、更端到端的路径,由学校、雇主与政府共同打造。这正是 TIP Alliance 在做的事——更长、更结构化的实习;为新进职场者准备结构化的学徒制;以及为在职者准备的工读路径,让他们能边做边学。
换句话说,这不是一次性的干预,而是一条无缝的路径——从学习,到接触工作场景,到就业,再到持续深化技能。我们就是这样帮助学生与应届生在快速变化的经济里保持相关性。
我们正在重新想象职业阶梯的前几级——把它们改造成校园与职场之间的「桥梁」,让学界与产业共同承担起搭建并加固这些连接的责任。
让我用一个真实例子说明这件事。
Muhamad Syabil Hafizdini 是新加坡理工大学(SIT)应用计算专业的学生。他同时也在 NCS 担任软件工程师,所走的是 NCS Fusion Programme——一条由 TIP Alliance 支持的结构化工读路径。通过这一项目,Syabil 把全职工作与兼职学业结合起来,同时深化他在云计算与 AI 方面的能力。
我见过 Syabil——他热爱自己的工作。他感到公司在持续投入帮助他再培训与升级技能,让他能在真实环境中应用所学。Syabil 的经历,正是学校与雇主在政府支持下紧密合作时所能成就的。
在 TIP Alliance 之下,我们将为应届生做更多。
TIP Alliance 起步时,我们关注的是 ITE 与理工学院学生的就业与路径成果。
现在,我们将把支持扩展到大学毕业生。我们将把这一项目更名为 TIP Alliance+。「PLUS」代表 Pathway Linking University Students。
升级后的 TIP Alliance+ 将惠及所有高等教育机构毕业生——不论是 ITE、理工学院还是大学毕业。毕业生将获得结构化学习路径、动手的产业经验、全方位的职业准备。我们要建立一套连贯、整合的体系,支持每位学生进入科技劳动力市场的旅程。
这次扩展有两项关键升级。
第一,我们将为信息通信与数字技术(IDT)毕业生加强行业相关培训与就业支持。
为帮助学生求职,IMDA 与全国职工总会(NTUC)旗下的 e2i 将启动「Tech Elevation & Career Hub」。这个枢纽把科技岗位、培训项目与职业资源汇集到一处,为应届生提供发现科技岗位、获得职业支持的便捷一站式入口。
对学生来说,这意味着进入职场的旅程更简单、更顺畅。他们不必在多个平台之间穿梭——只要去这一个地方,就能找到科技岗位与实习、获得职业辅导、发现能加强就业竞争力的培训机会。
平台将汇集 NCS、新科工程(ST Engineering)、埃森哲(Accenture)、Shopee 等关键雇主,以及软件工程师、数据工程师、数据架构师、技术功能分析师等令人兴奋的角色。
这是一个支持毕业生的一站式平台。
第二,我们将与产业伙伴共同设计「专门领域路径」,帮助学生培养并构建 AI 双语能力。如我前面所说,今天的雇主早已不仅仅在找技术能力或写代码的人了。雇主想找的是——懂得如何把 AI 应用并整合到各自领域里的人,最好入职第一天就能上手。
为了说明这些领域路径如何支持学生,我介绍一下来自埃森哲健康与公共服务部门的实习生 Isaac Lee。他在校期间参加了一项与政府科技局(GovTech)合作的产品培训项目与黑客松,参与者要打造解决真实用户需求的公共数字服务。
这种公共部门领域里的动手经验,在他后来加入埃森哲实习时派上了大用场。这个项目要求 Isaac 不能只停留在「想点子」,而要考虑用户需求、技术约束以及不同组件的集成,最终为公民交付一套可工作的方案——做的是面向真实世界的解决方案,不是抽象演练。这正是为「特定的、定制化的部署环境」准备的能力。
像 Isaac 这样的故事,体现了「领域经验」越来越重要。这就是为什么我们要推出专门领域路径,从 SCS 与 GovTech 牵头的「政府科技领域路径」开始。这条路径将为学生提供动手机会,同时构建起开发公共部门数字方案所需的技术能力与领域能力。
这些领域路径将以「短的、可堆叠的模块」加上产业接触机会的形式存在,与现有课程与实习并行。学生不仅能学到技术技能,还能掌握行业脉络、业务需求、真实约束等领域知识。
除了政府这个领域,我们也将由 SCS 与 Synapxe 牵头,为医疗科技(Healthtech)领域推出类似路径;并与新加坡金融管理局(MAS)和银行与金融学会(IBF)合作,探索金融服务领域的同类路径。
IMDA 将负责更广泛的协调,而 SCS、IBF、GovTech、MAS 等合作伙伴则贡献产业专长、行业知识与真实项目机会。
我们希望通过 TIP Alliance+,让应届生有信心在 AI 加持的工作场所中蓬勃发展。我们希望新加坡持续是一个闪亮、充满活力的枢纽,为科技专业人士提供好机会。
今天我最想留给各位的——除了具体公告与举措之外——是合作与伙伴关系的精神。
我们正在做的,是一项生态系统级的努力。
我们需要愿意在新人身上下注的产业伙伴——为我们的经济培养与磨砺下一代科技领导者与专业人士。
我们需要能快速审视并调整课程的教育机构——与产业紧密合作,引入最佳实践与最新技术趋势,让毕业生进入职场时具备相应技能。
我们需要愿意、也有能力指导下一代的资深专业人士。我们都是科技行业的「守护人」。在座所有人都曾受益于导师的指引与培养——我们也能为下一代做同样的事。
我们需要能够培育正确心态与支持结构的政府政策。
这是一项生态系统级的努力——私营部门、高等教育机构、政府。最重要的是,每个人自己都得愿意为自己的能力、未来与职业生涯投资。
我期待与所有伙伴一起,确保新加坡在 AI 时代继续繁荣,继续是一个充满活力的科技生态系统——为科技专业人士创造好工作,并为经济增长开辟下一个阶段。
非常感谢大家。
英文原文
MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期:2026-05-02
Ms Lim Bee Kwan, President, SCS Distinguished guests and fellow colleagues
Good morning and happy Friday. I'm delighted to join you for the first SCS AI Conference -- this Conference is timely.
Over the past 2 years, the discussions around AI have shifted – from generative AI chatbots to multi-agent implementation, from trialing off-the-shelf AI tools to developing business use cases around possibilities enabled by AI; from piloting AI solutions in workplaces to fundamentally redesigning organisational processes and workflows to integrate AI capabilities.
The conversations around AI have shifted to a much more meaningful, thoughtful, and systematic implementation of the technology.
At the same time, AI technology is developing at a fast pace. Sometimes we feel that AI tools are evolving faster than we can adapt!
However, we can already see the potential of AI in upending many existing business models and possibly disrupting entire industry sectors. The tech sector is likewise facing this disruptive pressure.
Before everyone gets overly anxious, let me start with some good news. Demand for tech professionals remains robust.
IMDA's Singapore Digital Economy Report, released in October 2025, revealed that our tech workforce grew from 208,300 in 2023 to 214,000 in 2024. The fastest-growing roles were AI & Data specialists and Cybersecurity professionals.
This is in line with the 2025 Job Vacancies Report, published recently by MOM. Among the most sought-after job roles were those in software development, data analysts and data scientists.
Today, around 60% of our tech workforce are hired by non-tech firms, such as banks, logistics firms and manufacturing plants.
Over the period of 2023 to 2024, tech roles in these non-tech sectors grew by 3.9%, compared to 1.1% in tech firms. We expect this trend to increase as AI adoption picks up pace across industry sectors.
So, that’s the good news – we still have jobs. And, there are still more vacancies in the tech sector than we can fill with warm bodies. There is strong and robust demand for tech professionals, especially in the non-tech sectors that are digitalising quickly and adopting AI in their workflows and organisations.
At the same time, AI tools are reshaping the nature of technical work.
For instance, junior software engineers used to hone their craft and gain experience with developing software codes.
I remember when I started work more than 20, almost 30, years ago – my first job was coding. That’s where you learn the basic foundation applied in the workspace, hone our skills and experience, and realise that not everything works exactly like in the textbook.
Today, AI tools, like Claude and Cursor have the capabilities to generate entire code blocks more efficiently than experienced developers.
GitHub Copilot can autocomplete not just lines of code, but entire functions. AI agents can execute multi-step development tasks on command.
We see a similar shift in other aspects of our tech roles.
For example, in cybersecurity, AI tools can now help security teams quickly triage alerts, summarise incidents into actionable findings, and recommend follow-up investigations or remediation steps.
Beyond reshaping the nature of tech jobs, AI has created new roles and opportunities today.
Roles such as AI red teamers, model evaluators, alignment researchers and AI deployment engineers – these are new roles that have emerged over the past few years. These are roles focused not solely on building AI systems, but testing them, governing them, and deploying them safely in real-world conditions.
We are also seeing examples around the world of non-tech trained individuals using AI-enabled tools to launch, automate and scale businesses – from telehealth providers to resume builders. But as AI lowers the barriers to building applications, it then also raises the bar for us – tech professionals, traditional IT teams and tech firms serving businesses.
What does that mean for us?
For the tech professionals in this room, this isn't just another wave of innovation to ride. It's a fundamental reimagining of the tech sector and tech-related jobs in the coming years.
These trends raise fundamental questions:
With AI advancing so rapidly, how can Singapore remain at the forefront of this technological trend and continue to grow the tech sector and continue to create good jobs for our tech professionals?
If AI can do many of the tasks that our engineers are doing, especially entry-level junior roles, how can we continue to train and nurture the next generation of tech professionals and leaders? How do we respond to the disappearing early rungs in the career ladder of our profession?
For instance, a software engineer’s role would have to go beyond coding. Instead, the value-add may now come from deeper engineering competencies such as managing AI tools, driving specifications, systems design and optimisation, ensuring data integrity, and designing governance and guardrails to manage AI adoption risks.
Another opportunity is to develop AI bilingual talent – engineers that can fuse AI know-how with deep business domain expertise.
As AI innovation and adoption accelerates across various sectors, businesses need tech professionals who can bridge the gap between technology and domain expertise. Going beyond pilots, organisations are focused on Returns on Investment - how the AI tool is used to solve real business problems, and whether it is scalable, cost-efficient and secure.
These are just a couple of possibilities. Importantly, all of us - the government, employers, tech companies and associations, and our Institutes of Higher Learning (IHL) must collectively find answers to these questions.
Minister Josephine Teo has asked me to study these issues and work out a set of responses. In the coming months, I plan to engage relevant stakeholders and work closely with our tech sector associations – SCS, SGTech and TTAB to continue this very important effort.
Adapting and pivoting are not new for us. We have done so with previous waves of technology.
In the late 1980s to 1990s, with the introduction of personal computers, we established Singapore as a global hub for electronics by focusing on high-value, capital-intensive technology industries. We trained and developed IT professionals, and upskilled workers across the economy to transition into knowledge-based jobs.
In the 2000s, we then transitioned from a manufacturing-focused economy into a vibrant digital hub with the ambition to become a Smart Nation. We invested heavily in building up a strong base of tech talent, equipped with skills in software engineering, cloud computing and cybersecurity.
Now most recently with AI, under our refreshed National AI Strategy, we have made good progress in building up a pipeline of AI Practitioners and helping our workers across different industry sectors become more AI-fluent.
Even though I plan to engage stakeholders, we are not waiting to figure out the answers before we act. The external environment and the tech development trends are evolving too quickly for that.
Our pragmatic approach is to quickly leverage and adapt existing programs.
A good example is IMDA’s TechSkills Accelerator, or TeSA, has been a cornerstone initiative in developing tech professionals and ensuring that our existing tech workforce remains relevant in a fast-changing sector. Since 2016, TeSA has placed around 24,300 locals into tech jobs and upskilled over 440,000 individuals in domains such as data and AI.
Earlier this year, MDDI announced that we will expand the TeSA programme to support non-tech professionals in developing AI bilingualism. For a start, we will focus on sectors that have high exposure to AI and serve multiple industries, such as the Accountancy and Legal domains.
We will also expand the TeSA for ITE and Polytechnics Alliance, or TIP Alliance, that was launched in 2022.
TIP Alliance members comprise industry representatives, key employers, IHLs and government, worked closely together to improve the employment outcomes for ITE and polytechnic graduates and create structured pathways that give our students real-world experience and industry connections.
Since its launch, the TIP Alliance has secured over 1,000 committed tech jobs and facilitated more than 2,300 year-long internships to equip ITE and Polytechnic students with industry-relevant skills and practical experience.
I’m glad to share that over 200 companies have pledged to skills-based hiring – evaluating candidates based on what they can do, not just their academic qualifications.
The TIP Alliance has made good progress over the past few years. I will expand the TIP Alliance to respond to the AI trends I spoke about earlier.
First, on better preparing fresh graduates for the workforce, especially when the first couple of rungs of the traditional career ladders are being transformed and disrupted by AI.
For our students who are entering the workforce, we know that this can be daunting. It raises questions like whether companies will still hire fresh graduates if AI can perform basic tasks, or whether the skills that you learnt in school are still relevant in the workplace today.
I speak to many fresh graduates, and that is the anxiety – sometimes it is amplified, but I can understand why they are feeling so. When you are about to enter a very different environment, from school to the workforce, there is a lot of anxiety. Through the TIP Alliance, we have created many structured pathways experiences to ease this anxiety and better prepare our graduates.
I started this conversation with the TIP Alliance members last year.
I am heartened by the discussions amongst members. The discussions were open, constructive and productive. There was acknowledgment that everyone needs to play their part. We cannot expect the private sector to be fully responsible for basic on the job workplace training, especially when AI is automating many of the entry-level tasks.
We also cannot expect the schools to only focus on industry-ready skills at the expense of building a strong foundation – the latter is still needed, even though agentic AI can perform many of the tasks that humans can do. But without the foundation, students or graduates who enter the workforce will not be able to reskill, upskill, and continue their learning process.
What this means is that we need both hands to clap – not just putting the responsibility on employers or schools. Instead, both parties come together and have a discussion on what we can do collectively.
And, what we need is a more deliberate, end-to-end pathway, jointly built by schools, employers and Government. That is what the TIP Alliance is doing through longer and more structured internships for students, structured apprenticeships for those entering workforce, and work-study pathways for those who need to keep upgrading while on the job.
In other words, this is not a once-off intervention. It is a seamless pathway from learning to workplace exposure, to employment, and to continued skills deepening. This is how we intend to help our students and fresh graduates stay relevant in a fast-changing economy.
We are reimagining those early rungs of the career ladder and converting them into bridges between school and the workplace, where academia and the industry have a shared responsibility to build and strengthen these linkages.
Let me share what this looks like in practice.
Muhamad Syabil Hafizdini is an SIT student studying applied computing. He is also currently a software engineer at NCS, under the NCS Fusion Programme, a structured work-study pathway supported by the TIP Alliance. Through the programme, Syabil has balanced full-time work with part-time studies while deepening his expertise in cloud and AI.
I’ve met Syabil – he enjoys his work. He feels that there is continuous investment in him to reskill and upskill himself, and this allows him to apply those skills in the real-world environment. Syabil’s journey illustrates what is possible when schools and employers work closely together, with the support of the government.
We will do more for our fresh graduates under the TIP Alliance.
Earlier, when we started the TIP Alliance, we were looking at employment and pathway outcomes for ITE and Polytechnic students.
We will now expand the support to include University graduates. We will rename the effort to TIP Alliance+. “PLUS” stands for Pathway Linking University Students.
With the expansion, TIP Alliance+ will benefit all our IHL graduates – regardless of whether they are graduating from ITE, a polytechnic, or a university. Graduates will have access to structured learning pathways, hands-on industry experience, and comprehensive career preparation. We're putting in place a coherent, integrated system that supports every student's journey into the tech workforce.
This expansion will have 2 key enhancements.
First, we will enhance industry-relevant training and employment support for Infocomm and Digital Technology (IDT) graduates.
To assist students in their job search, IMDA and NTUC’s e2i are launching the Tech Elevation & Career Hub. The Hub brings together tech jobs, training programmes, and career resources. This platform provides a convenient, single-entry point for fresh graduates to discover technology roles and access career support.
For our students, this means a simpler and more facilitated journey into the workforce. Instead of navigating multiple platforms, they can go to one place to find tech jobs and internships, access career coaching, and identify training opportunities that can strengthen their employability.
The platform will feature key employers such as NCS, ST Engineering, Accenture, and Shopee, as well as exciting roles such as Software Engineer, Data Engineer, Data Architect and Techno Functional Analyst.
It’s a one-stop platform to support our graduates.
Secondly, we will implement specialised domain pathways, co-designed with industry partners, to help students adopt and build AI Bilingualism. As I shared earlier, employers today are no longer just looking for technical capabilities or the ability to write code. Employers are looking for individuals who understand how to apply and integrate AI into their respective domains, preferably from Day 1 with the company.
To illustrate how these domain pathways support our students, let me share about Isaac Lee, a Health & Public Services Intern from Accenture. He joined a product training programme and hackathon with GovTech during his school term, where participants were tasked to build public digital services that addressed user needs.
This hands-on experience within the public sector domain came in helpful when he later joined Accenture as an intern, as the programme required Isaac to go beyond product ideation and instead consider user requirements, technical constraints, and the integration of different components to deliver a working solution for citizens, i.e. develop solutions for the real-world, not just in abstract. This is for specialised and tailored environments, in which those solutions will be deployed.
Stories like Isaac’s reflect the growing importance of domain experience. That is why we are launching specialised domain pathways, starting with the Government Tech Domain Pathway which will be led by SCS and GovTech. This pathway will give students hands-on opportunities to build both the technical and domain capabilities needed to develop digital solutions for the public sector.
These domain pathways will take the form of short, stackable modules and industry exposure opportunities that sit alongside existing curriculum and internships. Through these pathways, students will not only pick up technical skills, they will also gain sector-specific knowledge, such as industry context, business needs and real-world constraints.
Besides Government as a domain, we will implement a similar track for the Healthtech sector led by SCS and Synapxe, and are exploring the same for the Financial Services sector in partnership with MAS and IBF (Institute of Banking and Finance).
IMDA will support the broader coordination, while partners such as SCS, IBF, GovTech and MAS will contribute industry expertise, sector knowledge and real project exposure.
Through the TIP Alliance+, we aim to provide our fresh graduates with the confidence that they can thrive in an AI-enabled workplace. We hope that Singapore continues to be a shining, vibrant hub that provides good opportunities for tech professionals.
Most importantly, the message I hope to leave with all of you today – beyond the specific announcements and initiatives, is the spirit of collaboration and partnership.
What we are doing is an ecosystem-wide effort.
We need industry partners who are willing to take risks on new talent – to nurture and groom the next generation of tech leaders and professionals for our economy.
We need educational institutions that can review and adjust their curricula quickly – working closely with the industry to bring in best practices and the latest technology trends so that we can equip our graduates with the skills for them to be ready when they enter the workforce.
We need experienced professionals who are willing and able to mentor the next generation. We are stewards in the tech sector. All of us here have benefitted from mentors who have guided and nurtured us – we can do the same for the next generation.
And we need government policies that foster the right mindset and support structures.
It is an ecosystem-wide effort – private sectors, IHLs, and the government. Most importantly, individuals themselves must be willing to invest in their own capabilities, futures, and careers.
I look forward to working with all our partners to ensure that Singapore continues to thrive in the AI world, and be a vibrant tech ecosystem – creating good jobs for tech professionals, and driving the next bound of growth for the economy.
Thank you very much.