MDDI 演讲稿 · 2025-09-30

政务部长Jasmin Lau在AWS新加坡公共部门日上的开幕致辞

政务部长Jasmin Lau在AWS新加坡公共部门日上的开幕致辞

Jasmin Lau · MDDI 政务次长 · AWS 新加坡公共部门日

要点

  • 新加坡每位公务员须完成强制性 AI 素养课程,延续过去一年政府高层亲身学习数字产品开发技能的举措。
  • LAUNCH! AI 孵化器计划让工艺教育学院与劳动力新加坡的非技术背景公务员,在 AWS 支持下开发出用于自动批改和职位匹配的 AI 原型工具。
  • 政府 AI 工具 Pair 和 AIBots 已成为公务员的日常工作伴侣,以 AI 驱动的公民查询响应取代了以往耗时数周的人工常见问题撰写。
  • Health Kaki 由卫生部、健康促进局、Synapxe、AWS 和 Temus 联合开发,利用 AI 将用户健康目标转化为个性化的每日饮食和运动提示。
  • 公积金局呼叫中心运用 AI 识别难以使用自助功能的来电者,并将其转接至人工客服,确保技术能力较弱的公民获得个性化支持。
  • 在 AWS「AI Spring」计划下新签两项谅解备忘录:南洋理工学院将设立 AI Nexus Lab 供学生为中小企业开发原型方案,共和理工学院则将 AWS 智能编码平台 Kiro 纳入正式课程。

完整译文(中文)

MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21

Jeff Johnson先生,AWS东南亚区董事总经理;

Elsie Tan女士,AWS新加坡公共部门国家经理;

各位嘉宾、各位同仁。

早上好。很高兴出席由Amazon Web Services与GovInsider联合举办的今年公共部门日。

在正式开始之前,让我做个小调查——今年至少参加过五场AI会议的有多少人?(如果你旁边的人举了手,那他才是你该认真聆听的专家,而不是我!)不过,我很高兴大多数人对这类会议巡回仍相对陌生,因此今天的活动应能让你们对未来的方向以及我们所有人可以把握的机遇有一个很好的认识。

与其将今天的聚会视为一场会议或活动,不如将它看作连接两种理想的桥梁——我们重塑公共服务的共同愿景,以及技术必须服务于每位新加坡人日常生活的坚定信念。真正的挑战在于如何搭建这座桥梁,而这绝非任何单一机构能够独力完成的。

这正是此类聚会的意义所在——当公共部门与私营部门携手合作,我们不只是在谈论转型,而是在一位公民、一项服务地将其变为现实。

让我分享一些我们迄今为止努力的故事,希望这些故事能够激励大家,让我们在这一重要使命上继续前行。

我们必须搭建的第一座桥梁,是最私人的那一座。转型必须从内部开始——从我们自身,以及我们身边的团队开始。如果我们自己不真正拿起工具、在日常工作中加以使用,它们终究只是PowerPoint幻灯片或Canva幻灯片上的承诺。

人人都在谈论AI。有时我真的很想问:你是在使用AI,还是只是在谈论它?因为一旦你开始使用这些工具,就会发现它目前并没有你想象的那么出色。你必须先开始使用ChatGPT或Pair,才能真正认识到它的全部潜力以及它的不足之处。只有当我们作为领导者亲身实践,才能发现什么真正可行,什么不可行。

我再给大家分享另一个例子。当我参加大选时,我们都被告知最好提升社交媒体的运营能力。我不知道社交媒体运营者用什么工具制作那些精美的短视频。我意识到,作为选举候选人意味着没有团队帮你,你必须自己摸索,包括去学CapCut。我发现,无论工具多么出色,如果内容本身不够有趣或引人入胜,再多的视频剪辑也无济于事。

所以,关键真的在于亲身实践,学会如何使用这些工具,了解它们的局限所在,我认为这才是充分发挥这些工具潜力的方式。

正因如此,正如甘副总理近日宣布的,每位公务员都将参加强制性的AI素养课程。这是在过去一年努力基础上的延伸——我们的政府高层领导撸起袖子,学习了从互联网运作原理到如何构建数字产品或网络应用程序的各种知识。因为我们不能要求我们的人员去拥抱我们自己都不了解的东西。

对我们而言,学习不是奢侈品。学习是我们保持与所服务对象紧密相关的方式。这是我们必须认真对待的责任。

听闻LAUNCH! AI孵化器计划,我深感振奋——许多毫无技术背景的公务员在该计划中构建了AI原型,以解决实际工作中的挑战。在AWS的支持下,来自工艺教育学院(ITE)和劳动力发展局(Workforce Singapore)的团队创建了用于自动批改和职位匹配的工具。他们不是技术专家,而是发现问题并决定构建解决方案的普通公务员。作为领导者,我们必须为团队创造探索和学习的空间。这才是转型从基层生长而来的方式,而非自上而下。

在探索AI的过程中,我们意识到技术并非魔法棒,而是一把钥匙——它只能打开为它设计的那扇门。真正理解问题,才能让我们负责任地、有效地运用技术。

目前,我们许多机构都设有技术团队和工程部门。如果那里的工作人员不理解他们所要解决的问题,或者每天都要问上司:「你想让我做什么?」,那我们就麻烦了。我们需要帮助更多的公务员真正掌握问题,充分理解它,了解我们在为哪些群体的公民设计解决方案,这样才有希望从我们的系统中获得真正好的成果。

作为公务员——我自己也是不久前才卸任公务员——我们花费无数时间撰写简报、综合政策、准备演示文稿。我记得那些深夜,笔记本电脑上开着40个标签页,淹没在复杂的信息、数据点和政策文件中,试图将复杂的信息提炼成清晰可操作的内容。

正因为我们对这种痛苦如此熟悉,我们立刻意识到语言模型能为我们做什么,这也是为什么今天我们拥有Pair和AIBots等政府AI工具,它们现在已成为我们的日常伴侣。它们不是取代我们的思考,而是让我们得以专注于真正重要的思考。我不知道今天在座是否有年轻公务员已经受益于AIBots或聊天机器人来回答公众查询。

过去,我们当中有很多人的工作是为网站撰写常见问题解答(FAQ),以便人们在Google搜索时能弹出正确答案。人们曾经花费数天乃至数周时间撰写数百条FAQ,然后还要经过多轮审核。如今,由于AI的出现,大量这类工作已不再必要。我们中的更多人现在可以将时间真正用于与市民互动,并为那些问题可能不在常见问题列表之内的人提供支持。

稍后你们将听到Pair团队分享他们的历程,介绍他们如何为政府工作量身定制AWS的生成式AI服务。我也想亲自感谢Pair团队,因为我现在每周至少使用Pair两次。

这让我们明白,为什么深厚的领域知识和对用户痛点的深刻理解,是负责任的AI应用与鲁莽实验之间的分水岭。我们需要更多我所说的「双语」从业者——既能讲AI的语言,又能讲自身领域语言的人,无论是教育、医疗还是城市规划领域。我们需要更多这样的工作人员、更多这样的团队,才能为公共服务有效地开发AI。

合作关系能为我们带来更多这样的双语团队。一个很好的例子是Health Kaki,我相信今天也有展示。卫生部(MOH)、健康促进局(HPB)、Synapxe、AWS和Temus合作创建了一款数字健康伴侣。它现在能将健康目标转化为个性化的日常提示——更健康的食谱、运动建议——利用AI将行为医学付诸实践。欢迎稍后到外面展区参观Health Kaki展位!

但让我们坦诚面对AI的局限性。

一旦我们自己开始使用这些工具,就能清楚地看到它们的问题——幻觉、偏离目标的输出、无法真正产生共鸣或理解细微差别的聊天机器人。我相信你们当中有不少人喜欢对AI进行极限测试和越狱,看看它会做出什么有趣的事情。

这正是为什么我们绝不能忘记:我们有能力塑造技术,确保它服务于我们、强化我们,而不是反过来。

我上周在国会的首次演讲中谈到了我自己的顾虑——随着时间推移,技术和AI可能会成为我们的数字鸦片。我不知道你们中有没有人注意到,但这是我非常有感触的事情。起初,它是有趣的,起初,它是有帮助的,但过了一段时间,我们变得懒惰了。我们发现,以前需要两个小时才能完成的事情,现在10分钟就能搞定,而上司也没有察觉。上司似乎也没有在认真阅读。就这样,人们上瘾了。

这就是我们失去人性的方式。这就是我们停止在所做之事中注入智慧的方式。我们尚处于早期阶段,还没有到那一步,但我个人非常清醒地意识到我们可能会走到那一步。因此,我鼓励在座各位对此多加关注。是的,我们的生活很艰辛。是的,AI会帮助我们。但请记住,当我们尝试多使用一点技术时,不要使用人性。

这就是我们失去人性的方式。这就是我们停止在所做之事中注入智慧的方式。我们尚处于早期阶段,还没有到那一步,但我个人非常清醒地意识到我们可能会走到那一步。因此,我鼓励在座各位对此多加关注。是的,我们的生活很艰辛。是的,AI会帮助我们。但请记住,在尝试多使用一点技术时,不要失去人性。

因此,这意味着我们要坚守使我们成为人的价值观,并在每一件工具、每一个工作流程、每一套系统的设计中,在最关键的地方有意识地为人类的洞察力留出空间。

我们在公共服务的服务交付中经常看到这种情况。政府正在探索利用AI智能体引导客户处理简单的行政查询,以便一线工作人员能够专注于辅导与咨询工作。

同样,CPF的呼叫中心利用AI识别在自助服务选项上遇到困难的来电者,将不太擅长使用科技的市民转接给能够提供人性化关怀、协助与支持的真人服务人员。

归根结底,机器能够且确实比我们所有人处理信息更快,但它们无法为陷入困境的家庭提供辅导,无法鼓励挣扎中的学生,也无法引导企业主做出艰难决策。

最后,我们的努力远不止于改变公共服务。它将激励企业和公民加入这一征程。政府对技术理解得越深,就越能明白我们的企业和工作者在数字经济中蓬勃发展所需要的支持、推动因素与思维方式。

对推动因素的关注同样指引着我在经济战略检讨委员会的工作。我担任科技与创新委员会的主席。过去几个月,我深入了解了不同领域的企业如何以不同方式运用AI。每当我与企业交流、了解其挑战时,一种焦虑往往浮现——技术在飞速前进,而我们的技能和思维方式却难以跟上。这是我们作为一个国家必须解决的差距:如何确保我们的劳动力和工作者具备正确的技能与思维方式,以迎接未来的挑战?

正因如此,我很高兴宣布AWS的AI Spring计划的最新进展——AWS与高等学府之间签署了两份新的谅解备忘录(MOU)。

首先,通过全新的AI Nexus Lab,南洋理工学院的学生将有机会协助为中小企业(SME)开发原型解决方案,并与AWS平台及合作伙伴合作,将这些解决方案规模化推广。

首先,通过全新的AI Nexus Lab,南洋理工学院的学生将有机会协助为中小企业(SME)开发原型解决方案,并与AWS平台及合作伙伴合作,将这些解决方案规模化推广。

其次,共和理工学院的学生将在课程中学习使用AWS的智能体编程平台Kiro,从而磨砺面向未来工作的实用技能。

此类努力使我们更接近赋能型劳动力的愿景——即能够在各自领域中审慎且批判性地运用AI的劳动力。

让我们继续携手合作,赋能每一家企业和每一位员工,让AI的红利惠及并提升所有新加坡人。AI浪潮已经到来,它正在重塑我们生活、工作和服务的方式。但每一波浪潮都带来一个选择——随波逐流,还是奋起乘风、有所作为。

作为政府,我们必须帮助自身和人民以清晰的认知与充分的信心拥抱这项技术。这段旅程唯有携手合作方能成功——共同理解AI与新兴技术,以目标与原则为指引加以应用,并赋能每一位新加坡人做到同样的事。唯有如此,我们才能弥合技术所能实现的与人民所需其实现的之间的差距。

谢谢大家,愿我们共同学习、共同建设!祝各位一天愉快!

英文原文

MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21

Mr Jeff Johnson, Managing Director, ASEAN, AWS;

Ms Elsie Tan, Country Manager, Singapore Public Sector, AWS;

Distinguished guests, and fellow colleagues.

Good morning. I am delighted to join you at this year’s Public Sector Day, organised by Amazon Web Services and GovInsider.

Before we dive in, let me do a quick survey – how many of you have attended at least five AI conferences this year? (If you are seated next to someone who put up his hand, well, that’s the expert you should be listening to, not me!) But I'm glad most of you are still relatively fresh to this conference circuit, and therefore where you are today should give you a good flavour of what is to come and the possibilities out there that all of us can take on.

Think of today’s gathering as less of a conference or event, but more as a bridge between two ideals – our shared vision to reimagine public service, and our conviction that technology must serve every Singaporean's daily life. The real challenge is building the bridge to get us there, and no single organisation can build that bridge alone.

This is why gatherings like these matter -- when our public and private sectors come together, we don't just talk about transformation. We make it happen, one citizen at a time, one service at a time.

Let me share some stories about our efforts so far, and I hope that they will inspire you, as we continue on this important mission.

The first bridge we must build, is the most personal one. Transformation must begin from within – within ourselves, and our immediate teams. Until we ourselves actually pick up the tools and use them in our daily work, they remain just promises on a PowerPoint slide, or a Canva slide.

Everybody is talking about AI. Sometimes I do want to ask, so do you use AI, or do you just talk about it? Because once you start to use the tools, you start to realise that it's not at this point as great as you think it could be. You have to start using ChatGPT, or Pair, before you can realise the full potential and the downsides of it. Only when we get our hands dirty, as leaders, do we discover what is truly possible, and what is not.

I’ll share with you another example. When I took part in the general elections, we were all told that we’d better up our social media game. I didn’t know what kind of tools social media managers used to make these fancy reels. I realised that being a candidate for the election meant that there is no team to help you. You have to go figure it out yourself, including going to learn CapCut. I found out that no matter how good the tool is, if the subject is not funny or engaging, no amount of video editing is going to get you anywhere.

So it's really about getting our hands dirty, learning how to use these tools, learning what it cannot do, and I think that's the way we can bring out the best of these tools.

That is why, as DPM Gan announced recently, every public officer will take a mandatory AI literacy course. This builds on our efforts over the past year, where our senior Government leaders rolled up their sleeves to learn everything, from how the internet works, to how to build a digital product or a web application. Because we cannot ask our people to embrace what we do not understand ourselves.

Learning to us is not a luxury. Learning is how we stay relevant to the people we serve. It’s a responsibility that we have to take seriously.

I was particularly inspired, hearing about the LAUNCH! AI Incubator programme, where public officers, many without any technical background, built AI prototypes to solve real work challenges. With AWS support, teams from ITE and Workforce Singapore created tools for automated marking and job matching. These were not tech experts – they were everyday public servants who saw problems and decided to build solutions. As leaders, we must create space for our people to tinker and learn. That's how transformation grows from the ground up, not from the top down.

As we experiment with AI, we realise that technology is not a magic wand – it is a key that unlocks only the doors that it was designed for. Understanding the problem – really understanding it – is what is going to let us use technology responsibly and effectively.

Now, many of us in our agencies have technology teams and engineering departments. If any of the officers there do not understand the problem they are trying to solve, or have to ask their boss on a daily basis, “what do you want me to do?”, we are in trouble. We need to help a lot more of our public officers own the problems, fully understand it, know the groups of citizens that we are designing the solutions for, then there's hope that we get something good out of our systems.

As public officers, and it was not too long ago that I was a civil servant – we spend countless hours writing briefs, synthesising policies, and preparing presentations. I remember those late nights, with 40 tabs open on my laptop, drowning in the complex information, data points and policy papers, trying to distill complex information into something clear and actionable.

And because we knew this pain so intimately, we immediately recognised what language models could do for us, and this is why today we have government AI tools like Pair and AIBots, and these are now our daily companions. They don't replace our thinking, but free us to focus on the thinking that really matters. I don't know if we have young public officers here who today already benefit from AIBots or chatbots to answer public queries.

In the past, there were many of us whose jobs were to write the FAQs for websites so that when people Googled the FAQ, the correct answer will pop up. People used to spend days, if not weeks, just writing hundreds of FAQs, then it has to go through multiple rounds of vetting. Today, because of AI, a lot of that work is no longer necessary. Many more of us can now spend our time actually engaging citizens and supporting those whose questions may not fit into the general list that many people seek answers from.

You will hear the Pair team share their journey later, showing how they tailored AWS's generative AI services for government work. I also want to thank the Pair team personally, because I use Pair now at least twice a week.

This teaches us why deep domain knowledge and a good understanding of the user's pains is what separates responsible AI use from reckless experimentation. We need more of what I call “bilingual” practitioners, people who speak both the language of AI and the language of the field that they are in, be it education, healthcare or urban planning. We need more of these officers, more of these teams, to be able to develop AI effectively for the public service.

Partnerships can give us more of these bilingual teams. A great example is Health Kaki, which I believe is showcased today. MOH, HPB, Synapxe, AWS, and Temus collaborated to create a digital health companion. It now translates health goals into personalised daily nudges – healthier recipes, exercise tips – using AI to put behavioural medicine into practice. You can check out the Health Kaki booth at the exhibition outside later!

But let’s be honest about the limits of AI.

The moment we start using these tools ourselves, we see them clearly – the hallucinations, the outputs that miss the mark, the chatbots that cannot truly empathise or understand nuances. I’m sure there are lots of you who enjoy limit-testing and jail-breaking the AI to find out what kind of funny things it will do.

This is why we must never forget: we have the power to shape technology, ensuring it serves and strengthens us, not the other way around.

I spoke in my maiden speech in Parliament last week about my own fears that over time, technology and AI could become our digital opium. I don't know if some of you caught it, but it is something I feel very strongly about. At the start, it's fun, at the start it's helpful, and after a while, we become lazy. We find out that what used to take two hours to do, now I can take 10 minutes, and my boss doesn’t catch it. My boss doesn't seem to be reading it either. And then that's how they get addicted.

That's how we lose the humanity. That's how we stop putting in wisdom into what we do. We're very early in the game, not there yet, but I personally am very conscious that we could get there. Therefore I encourage all of you here to pay a little bit more attention to that. Yes, our lives are harsh. Yes, AI will help us. But remember not to use humanity when we try and use a little bit more technology.

That's how we lose the humanity. That's how we stop putting in wisdom into what we do. We're very early in the game, not there yet, but I personally am very conscious that we could get there. Therefore, I encourage all of you here to pay a little bit more attention to that. Yes, our lives are harsh. Yes, AI will help us. But remember not to lose humanity when we try and use a little bit more technology.

So this means holding on firmly to the values that make us human, and designing every tool, every workflow, every system with intentional space for human insight where it matters most.

We see this quite often in service delivery in the public service. The Government is exploring using AI agents to guide clients through simple administrative queries, so frontline workers can focus on counselling and advice.

Similarly, CPF’s call centres use AI to identify callers who struggle with self-help options, redirecting the less tech-savvy citizens to actual human officers who can provide human care, assistance and support.

Ultimately, machines will and do process information faster than all of us, but they cannot counsel a family in distress, affirm a struggling student, or advise a business owner through a tough decision.

Finally, our efforts reach far beyond transforming public services. They will inspire companies and citizens to join this journey. The more, we, in government, understand technology, the more we understand what support, enablers, and mindsets our businesses and workers need to thrive in the digital economy.

This focus on enablers also guides my work on the Economic Strategy Review Committee. I chair the Committee on Technology and Innovation. It’s been a good few months of understanding how businesses in different domains use AI differently. When I speak with companies to understand their challenges, one anxiety often surfaces – technology is racing ahead, while our skills and mindsets struggle to keep pace. So this is a gap that we will have to figure out as a country: how do we ensure that our workforce and our workers have the right skills and the right mindsets take on these challenges ahead?

That’s why I’m pleased to announce updates to AWS’s AI Spring initiative, with two new MOUs signed between AWS and Institutes of Higher Learning.

Firstly, through the new AI Nexus Lab, Nanyang Polytechnic students will have the chance to help prototype solutions for SMEs, and work with AWS platforms and partners to scale these solutions.

Firstly, through the new AI Nexus Lab, Nanyang Polytechnic students will have the chance to help prototype solutions for SMEs, and work with AWS platforms and partners to scale these solutions.

Secondly, Republic Polytechnic students will learn to use AWS's agentic coding platform, Kiro, as part of their curriculum – honing practical skills for the future of work.

Such efforts bring us closer to our vision of an empowered workforce – one that can apply AI thoughtfully and critically in their respective fields.

Let’s continue to work together to empower every company and every employee, so that the benefits of AI reach and uplift all Singaporeans. The AI wave is here, and it’s already reshaping the way we live, work, and serve. But with every wave comes a choice – to be swept along, or to rise and ride it purposefully.

As a Government, we must help ourselves and our people embrace this technology with clarity and confidence. This journey can only succeed if we work together – to understand AI and emerging technologies, apply them with purpose and principle, and empower every Singaporean to do the same. That is how we bridge the gap between what technology can do, and what our people need it to do.

Thank you, and here's to learning and building together! I wish you all a good day ahead!