口頭答覆 · 2024-11-13 · 屆國會 14

AI招聘晉升工具偏見防範

AI 治理與監管 AI 安全與倫理 AI 與就業 AI 與國家安全 爭議度 2 · 溫和質詢

議員質詢政府是否考慮制定指導方針,規範僱主使用自動化決策工具以防止招聘和晉升中的偏見,並建議進行偏見審計及資訊披露。人力部長回應現有《公平就業三方指引》已涵蓋公平就業原則,且無相關投訴,強調AI技術快速發展,政府將持續監測並與相關機構合作評估現有規範的適用性。質詢方補充關注資料隱私和員工同意問題,政府表示將考慮改進但不宜過度限制。

關鍵要點

  • 現有公平就業指引適用
  • 無AI歧視投訴記錄
  • 關注資料隱私與同意
政府立場

依託現有指引,持續監測AI發展

質詢立場

建議加強偏見審計與資料同意

政策訊號

持續完善AI就業監管框架

“AI technologies are evolving at a fast pace. In deploying AI-powered HR tools, organisations should refer to the guidelines introduced by the Government.”

參與人員 (5)

完整譯文(中文)

Hansard 原始記錄 · 2026-05-02

3號議員鄭德源先生詢問人力部部長,是否會考慮出臺關於僱主使用自動化就業決策工具(AEDT)的指導方針或法規。AEDT是指在招聘或晉升中實質性輔助或替代自由裁量決策的人工智慧技術,目的是防止偏見,包括要求企業在使用此類工具對候選人排名或評估員工晉升時進行偏見審計或披露的措施。

人力部部長(陳時亮博士)答覆:議長先生,無論使用何種技術工具輔助就業決策,如招聘或晉升,僱主都必須遵守《三方公平就業守則》,該守則促進公平和基於能力的就業實踐。

如果某些人工智慧(AI)的使用導致歧視性就業行為,員工或求職者可以向三方公平與進步就業聯盟(TAFEP)尋求幫助。TAFEP將與僱主合作,解決員工或求職者的申訴,確保僱主的招聘或績效評估流程遵循公平就業原則。迄今為止,TAFEP尚未收到因使用AI工具而產生的歧視投訴。

我還想提醒大家,AI技術發展迅速。在部署AI驅動的人力資源(HR)工具時,組織應參考政府推出的支援負責任AI開發和使用的指導方針。政府將繼續密切監測AI採用趨勢,並與我們的三方合作伙伴、人力資源專業人員協會(IHRP)及更廣泛的人力資源社群合作,定期評估現有指導方針和法規是否足夠。

議長先生:鄭先生。

鄭德源先生(先鋒選區):議長先生,感謝部長的答覆。我有一個補充問題,關於在使用AI系統,特別是在人力資源流程中,如何更好地保護員工的資料隱私。

我很高興部長介紹了《職場公平法案》以及一些措施和三方諮詢,但我們能否確保在使用員工資料進行AI驅動的決策(包括晉升、招聘、再就業和裁員)之前,獲得員工的同意?

陳時亮博士:感謝議員的補充問題。我們肯定會採納議員的建議,繼續完善流程並加強管理。

正如我之前所說,AI的採用和多種工具的使用正在快速推進。過於嚴格和詳細的法規不僅不切實際,而且鑑於AI產業的發展階段,我們目前也難以完全跟上。

我認為最好的、細緻入微的方法是繼續保持明確的負責任AI使用原則,政府已經以模型AI治理框架的形式推出了相關指導。其中一個例子是AI Verify。為了簡潔起見,我不打算在此詳細討論。這是由信息通信媒體發展局(IMDA)開發的工具包。如果有議員在後續議會會議中提出相關問題,我很樂意向議員們介紹如何使用它。

對於許多公司可能使用的演算法中的資料使用,確保個人相關資料匿名化非常重要。當然,獲得同意也是我們關注的重點之一。希望這能讓議員放心,我們正在盡一切努力保持領先。

議長先生:陳武明博士,請簡短髮言。

陳武明博士(裕廊選區):我想請問部長,在他對TAFEP當前關於不公平人力資源行為案件的評估中,大約有多少比例的案件裁決依賴於對招聘經理或公司管理層意圖的證明?因為使用AI時,難以確定意圖,AI無法像人類一樣作證、接受交叉詢問或為調查提供資訊。

陳時亮博士:感謝陳博士的補充問題。正如我所說,我們正處於AI採用的關鍵轉型階段。此前我們有一系列討論,陳博士也提醒我們,如今甚至可以用ChatGPT提起法律訴訟。

因此,當前最重要的是與可能感到受委屈的員工或潛在員工密切合作,及時發現此類案件以便調查。隨後,我們會與公司合作,檢視某些演算法——有時並非出於意圖,而可能是公司使用的資料集的功能——是否存在固有偏見,例如在考察某些特徵時,從而偏向於基於這些特徵的招聘或晉升。

我們需要持續保持警惕,所有相關方共同參與。我們還需要不同機構、人力資源專業人員協會(IHRP)、勞工運動以及三方合作伙伴共同參與。這樣,我們才能確保為每個人創造更公平的社會和職場環境。

議長先生:普里坦·辛格先生。

普里坦·辛格先生(亞歷山大選區):議長先生,針對部長關於AI的發言,我想通過提問作出回應。不幸的是,從工人角度來看,通常不具備比僱主更優的資訊地位,因此他們不知道AI系統在後臺進行了哪些篩選或預先資格審查。

在這種情況下,權力總是不平衡的,資訊總是對僱主有利,人力部會考慮採取哪些新方法,鼓勵員工向TAFEP或人力部其他適當機構提出關切?

陳時亮博士:感謝反對黨領袖的提問。我認為重要的是認識到,在當今環境下,員工在選擇僱主方面也有一定優勢,因為我們勞動力市場非常緊張。因此,我們要實現良好平衡,既要有負責任的員工(他們構成了我們勞動力的多數),也要有負責任的僱主(他們是整個就業生態系統的多數),通過三方合作——與新加坡全國僱主聯合會(SNEF)、勞工運動以及其他非政府組織、人力資源專業人員協會(IHRP)等合作——實現良好平衡。我們希望繼續保持這一和諧生態系統。

當然,我們不能掉以輕心,必須繼續努力推動三方合作,與不同商會合作實現目標。但我想向領袖保證,每一宗投訴和每一個問題都會以非常明確和透明的方式迅速處理。通過建立投訴性質的資料庫和資料庫,我們將提升保護員工的能力,同時維護僱主的利益平衡。

英文原文

SPRS Hansard · Fetched: 2026-05-02

3 Mr Patrick Tay Teck Guan asked the Minister for Manpower whether the Ministry will consider introducing guidelines or regulations on employer's use of Automated Employment Decision Tools (AEDT), which are artificial intelligence technologies that substantially assist or replace discretionary decision-making in hiring or promotions, in order to prevent biases and including measures such as requiring companies to conduct a bias audit or to make disclosure where such tools are used to rank candidates or assess employees for promotion.

The Minister for Manpower (Dr Tan See Leng) : Mr Speaker, regardless of the technological tools used to aid employment decisions, such as hiring or promotions, employers must comply with the Tripartite Guidelines on Fair Employment Practices, which promotes fair and merit-based employment practices.

If certain artificial intelligence (AI) use results in discriminatory employment practices, workers or job applicants can approach the Tripartite Alliance for Fair and Progressive Employment Practices (TAFEP) for assistance. TAFEP will work with the employer to address the grievances of the workers or job applicants and ensure that the employer’s recruitment or performance appraisal processes adhere to the principles of fair employment. To date, TAFEP has not received complaints of discrimination arising from the use of AI tools.

I would also like to caution that AI technologies are evolving at a fast pace. In deploying AI-powered human resources (HR) tools, organisations should refer to the guidelines introduced by the Government to support the responsible development and use of AI. The Government will continue to closely monitor the trends in AI adoption and work with our tripartite partners, the Institute for Human Resource Professionals (IHRP) and the broader HR community to regularly assess if existing guidelines and regulations are adequate.

Mr Speaker : Mr Tay.

Mr Patrick Tay Teck Guan (Pioneer) : Mr Speaker, I thank the Minister for his response. Just one supplementary question on how we can better protect workers' data privacy when AI systems are used, especially in HR processes.

I am glad that the Minister has introduced the Workplace Fairness Bill as well as some of the measures and Tripartite Advisories, but can we ensure that workers' consent is obtained before their data is used for AI-driven decisions, including promotions, hiring, re-employment and layoffs?

Dr Tan See Leng : I thank the Member for his supplementary question. We certainly will take the Member's suggestion to continue to improve the processes and to tighten it.

As I have shared earlier on, the adoption of AI, the use of the multiple tools is proceeding at a fairly rapid pace. To be overly prescriptive, to be overly tight in terms of our regulations, I think it would not just be not practical, but I do not think at this particular point in time, given the stage of evolution of the entire AI industry, we can really catch up with them adequately.

I think the best, nuanced approach is to continue to maintain clear responsible use of AI, which the Government has actually introduced in the form of a model AI governance framework. And one particular example is AI Verify. I think for the purpose of the brevity of this discussion, I do not want to go into too much discussion on that part of it. This is a toolkit, which is developed by IMDA. I am happy to walk the Members of the House through at subsequent Parliamentary Sittings if there is another Parliamentary Question filed on that, to talk about how we can use that.

For the use of data in terms of the algorithms that many of these companies may want to use, it is important that the data pertaining to individuals is anonymised. And, of course, consent would really be one of those things that we are looking at as well. So, I hope that gives the Member that reassurance that we are doing everything that we can to stay on top of it.

Mr Speaker : Dr Tan Wu Meng, a short one please.

Dr Tan Wu Meng (Jurong) : Can I ask the Minister, in his assessment of the current landscape of TAFEP cases on unfair HR practices, roughly what proportion of cases did the adjudication hinge on proof of intention by the hiring manager or the company's management? Because with AI, it can be difficult to ascertain intention because the AI is not able to give testimony and be cross-examined or provide information for investigation the way a human can be questioned.

Dr Tan See Leng : I thank Dr Tan for his supplementary question. As I have said, we are at a very pivotal state of transformation and the adoption of AI. If we were having a series of discussions earlier on and Dr Tan himself also brought to our attention that, today, you can actually file a legal suit using ChatGPT.

So, what is fundamentally important for us today is to work closely with employees or with potential employees who may feel that they are aggrieved, to surface such cases to us so that we can investigate. Then, obviously, we will work with the companies to see if some of the algorithms – sometimes, it may not be an intention, it could be a function of the datasets that the company is using – have an inherent bias, for instance, in looking at certain characteristics and, therefore, favour hiring or promotion in favour of those characteristics.

So, we need that constant sense of vigilance, we need the participation of all parties coming together. We also need different agencies, the IHRP, the Labour Movement and we need our tripartite partners to come into the space alongside with us. Then we can ensure a more equitable society and workplace for everyone.

Mr Speaker : Mr Pritam Singh.

Mr Pritam Singh (Aljunied) : Mr Speaker, just a response to the Minister through a question vis-à-vis what he said about AI. Unfortunately, from the worker's perspective, one usually is not in a position of information superiority over the employer, so you do not know what back-end selections or pre-qualifications your AI system has done.

So, in that context, where there is always a power imbalance and there is always information asymmetry in favour of an employer, what new approaches would the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) consider to encourage employees to raise concerns to, say, TAFEP or to any other appropriate authority in MOM?

Dr Tan See Leng : I thank the Leader of the Opposition for his question. I think that it is important to recognise that in today's climate, depending on which aspects that you are looking at, the employee also has certain advantages vis-à-vis choosing the choice of employers that they want to work for, because we do have a very tight labour market. So, it is how we achieve that good balance, of balancing responsible employees who really form the majority of our workforce, alongside responsible employers who are also the majority of our entire job ecosystem, with a very good balance achieved through tripartism – working with the Singapore National Employers' Federation (SNEF), working with the Labour Movement and also getting other non-government organisations, the IHRP and other organisations which have been working alongside with us. We hope that we can continue to maintain this harmonious ecosystem.

Of course, we cannot take things for granted because we continue to work hard at tripartism, at working with the different chambers to achieve this. But I want to reassure the Leader that every single complaint and every single question is dealt with expeditiously in a very clear and transparent manner. And by building a database, a repository of the nature of the different types of complaints, it would sharpen our ability to protect employees better and, at the same time, maintain that balance for employers.