MDDI 演讲稿 · 2025-10-28
高级政务部长陈杰豪在美国商会新加坡分会Balestier系列活动上的开幕致辞
高级政务部长陈杰豪在美国商会新加坡分会Balestier系列活动上的开幕致辞
要点
- • 新加坡60年开放经济模式——欢迎外资与国际人才而非采取保护主义——构成其当前拥抱AI战略的历史基础。
- • 政府推行双轨AI采纳策略:与跨国企业合作设立卓越中心以推动前沿创新,同时将AI工具嵌入现有数字化项目以惠及中小企业。
- • 政府正与酒店、制造及医疗保健领域的科技和服务供应商合作,为中小企业整理一套可直接部署的AI工具集合。
- • 初级国务部长陈慷和于本次活动前正式启动AI全球影响力实验室,该实验室由多家企业联合组建,是全球首批将AI融入物联网的实验室之一。
- • 新加坡倡导"竞争加协作"的AI治理框架:各方在AI产品上相互竞争,同时与政府及多边机构共同建立安全、道德与可信赖的防护机制。
- • 新加坡将自身定位为负责任的伙伴,愿在AI采纳、创新及算法治理层面与志同道合的国际伙伴携手合作。
完整译文(中文)
MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21
下午好。
我非常高兴今天能在 Balestier 系列活动上与各位相聚,并有机会参观你们的新中心。衷心感谢 Hsien 和她的团队筹办此次活动,以及诚挚的邀请。感谢 AmCham 所有的支持者和朋友,感谢你们多年来与新加坡政府的合作伙伴关系,以及在众多有意义的倡议中携手共进。
我早些时候问了 Hsien 和同事,鉴于我的职责范围和观点,我应该谈些什么、什么话题会让大家感兴趣。我想触及的一个话题,也希望稍后能展开讨论,就是年度热词——AI,即人工智能。这是一项可能具有变革性的技术。
我确实相信,我们目前看到的只是 AI 技术发展的极早期、萌芽阶段,但没有人知道 AI 会发展得多快、会变得多强大。
我们在商业活动和日常生活中都感受到了人工智能的影响。许多人正在使用这项技术,甚至用来规划旅行行程或查找食谱。孩子们有时也在使用 AI,尽管我认为他们年龄还太小。AI 已经真正成为我们生活的一部分、商业环境的一部分,也是社会的一部分。那么,我们应该如何拥抱它?
在新加坡,我们拥抱技术,这确实源于我们的现实处境。今年,我们庆祝独立 60 周年。与世界上许多其他国家相比,我们是一个非常年轻的国家。对许多文明和许多更古老的文化而言,六十年不过是一瞬间。六十年前,新加坡没有自然资源禀赋,也没有稀有矿产。
我们的先辈来自世界各地、亚洲各地,并决定将这个小岛国作为自己的家园。
为了使其行之有效,新加坡必须发挥创造力,以保持与世界其他地区的关联。六十年前,对许多新兴发展中国家而言,当时的主流经济理念是保护本国产业、对外封闭,等到产业足够强大后再开放,以避免竞争和被剥削的风险。
新加坡走了一条截然不同的道路。我们向世界开放,欢迎来自国际的企业和人才成为新加坡故事的一部分,与我们携手合作,为企业的股东、利益相关者和员工创造价值,并为新加坡人创造机遇。这就是我们的故事:拥抱技术,拥抱世界,因为这是我们唯一可行的道路。
六十年过去了,世界已经改变。我们现在乘飞机环游世界参加商务会议,而不再乘坐轮船。我们瞬间就能发送电子邮件和 WhatsApp 消息。技术与 60 年前大相径庭。但新加坡的一些基本原则没有改变。
其中之一是我们需要与世界其他地区保持紧密联系,保持开放、保持关联,并继续与志同道合的伙伴合作创造机遇。这在今天尤为重要,因为许多经济体正在转向内顾,变得更加民粹主义或保护主义,从长远来看损害了本国人民和世界的利益。
新加坡必须继续保持开放,欢迎各种理念和企业与我们共同创造价值,为你们、为我们的人民、为子孙后代。
这就是我们思考技术和 AI 问题的背景。
我们始终拥抱技术,从计算机化到互联网,再到云计算等数字技术,以及现在的 AI。技术帮助我们克服土地面积、市场规模、人口等方面的限制,使我们能够与志同道合的伙伴合作,在新加坡之外创造新的商业模式和机遇。因此,技术确实是我们需要拥抱的东西,AI 也不例外。
让我谈谈拥抱 AI 的两个层面。一是在经济和企业中拥抱 AI。我们相信,无论大小企业都可以运用技术。
今年有一项非常有趣的研究荣获诺贝尔经济学奖,研究主题是创新创造与经济增长。
其中一项发现是关于小企业往往是创造新商业模式和推动创新的主体。美国经济在鼓励创新和创造性破坏(即创新创造)方面堪称黄金标准。
但我认为其中一个重要方面是,这不仅仅是关于创新,而是允许小企业挑战现有企业,允许小企业进行创新。
当小企业进行创新时,有时也会让大企业受益,因为它们是更大生态系统和价值链的一部分。
AI 也不例外。我们正在帮助大大小小的企业,尤其是那些可能没有充裕预算或内部团队的中小企业,在其 AI 旅程中提供支持,获取技术,并以有意义的方式加以运用。
这不仅仅是适应和采用技术,而是改变业务流程、创造新的价值。因此,这是采用层面的一个组成部分,不仅与大企业合作,也与各类企业全面合作。
我们也针对不同企业采取不同的策略。
对于跨国公司等大型企业,我们共同在企业内部设立卓越中心,帮助它们推动 AI 创新的前沿。
我们欢迎在座的企业与我们共同设立这些卓越中心。当拥有足够规模的人才、理念和技术时,整个新加坡体系都会从中受益。
对于规模较小的企业,我们将其嵌入众多数字化项目之中。例如,帮助它们采用易于获取的 AI 工具。你可能有一款 CRM 软件、一款电子发票软件,但你可以轻松地将 AI 功能嵌入其中许多工具,从而在生产力和创新方面获得显著提升。
我们正与不同领域的技术和服务提供商合作,包括酒店业、制造业和医疗保健业,精心筛选一套能够惠及我们中小企业的 AI 赋能工具。
我也简要谈谈 AI 创新。我们希望与志同道合的伙伴携手创新。
例如,在我来参加本次活动之前,我刚刚启动了 AI Global Impact Lab。这是首个由多家企业共同创立的全球影响力实验室,也是世界上最早将 AI 应用于 IoT 的 AI 实验室之一。
这正是我所说的创新的典范。因为创新真正的意义在于开放合作,贯穿整个价值链和生态系统。
在新加坡,这不仅仅是在政府与学术界之间寻找合作关系,还在于在不同领域和生态系统中寻找有意义的合作关系,从而创造新的商业模式和新的商业价值。
因此,AI应用与创新是两大重要议题。我也坚信,技术的使用本身不能成为主要目标。
归根结底,技术的意义在于改善生活、创造影响,在于推动社会向更好的方向转变。在AI领域,国际社会需要在多方利益相关者之间寻求平衡——涵盖政府、私营部门、民间部门以及不同经济区域——即便在相互竞争的同时,也能凝聚合力。
在商业领域,我们相互竞争,以便为客户提供更优质的服务;我们竞相推出更好的产品、更好的创新,以便把事情做得更好。
但即便在竞争之中,也同样需要合作。
因为只有建立起适当的护栏,真正的创新才得以发生。我们竞相打造最快的汽车,但在道路安全层面,我们携手合作,共同打造最好的汽车,最终让人们从技术中受益。
AI亦不例外。我们在AI服务上展开竞争,比拼谁能拥有更好的AI产品。
但若技术与AI至关重要,我们便会发现,跨越边界、跨越行业、跨越国家与多边机构、携手合作以落实护栏的意愿与能力同样不可或缺——唯有如此,我们借助AI产出的解决方案才能做到值得信赖、安全可靠、合乎伦理、具有代表性,并切实改善人们的生活。
最后,新加坡乐于成为一个负责任的伙伴,在应用、创新以及协作落实相关算法方面,成为志同道合的利益相关者。
谢谢。
英文原文
MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21
Good afternoon.
I am very happy to join all of you here today at the Balestier series, and to be able to visit your new hub. A big thank you to Hsien and her team for putting this event together and for the kind invitation. To all the supporters and friends of AmCham, thank you very much for many years of partnership with the Singapore Government and for working together on many of these meaningful initiatives.
Earlier I asked Hsien and colleagues what I should talk about - what would be of interest to people, given my portfolio and my perspectives. One topic I thought I would touch on, and even open up for discussion later, is the buzzword of the year, AI - Artificial Intelligence. It is a potentially transformative technology.
I do believe that we are only seeing very early, nascent stages of technological developments of AI, but nobody knows how fast AI will go and how powerful it will be.
We are feeling the impact of artificial intelligence in our businesses and in our daily lives. Many are using this technology, even for planning trip itineraries or looking for recipes. Even kids are using AI sometimes, although I think they're too young to be using AI. AI is really part of our lives, part of our business environment, and part of society. So how do we embrace it?
In Singapore, we embrace technology, and it is really because of our circumstances. This year, we celebrate 60 years of independence. We are a very young nation compared to many other countries in the world. Sixty years is a blink of an eye for many civilizations and many older cultures. Sixty years ago, Singapore did not have natural endowments or rare minerals.
Our forefathers came from different parts of world, different parts of Asia, and decided to make this small island state their home.
To make it work, Singapore had to be creative in staying relevant to rest of the world. Sixty years ago, the conventional economic wisdom then, for many of the newly developing countries, was to protect their own industries, close off themselves to the world, until the industries were strong enough before opening up, to avoid competition and the risk of exploitation.
Singapore took a very different route. We opened up to the world and welcomed companies and talents internationally to be part of the Singapore story. To work together with us to create value for the company's shareholders, stakeholders and employees, and to create opportunities for Singaporeans. That was our story: embracing technology, embracing the world, because it was the only viable path for us.
Sixty years on, the world has changed. We now fly around the world for business meetings, instead of taking steamships. We send emails and WhatsApp in the blink of an eye. Technology is very different from 60 years ago. But some fundamentals have not changed for Singapore.
One of which is our need to be plugged into the rest of the world, to be open, relevant, and continue to work with like-minded partners to create opportunities. This is even more important today, as many economies are turning inward, and become more nativist or protectionist, to the long-term detriment of their own people and the world.
Singapore has to continue to stay open and to welcome ideas and companies to create value together with us, for you, our people and for generations to come.
This is the backdrop for how we think about technology and AI.
We have always embraced technology from computerisation to the internet, to digital technologies like cloud computing, and now AI. Technology helps us overcome constraints in land size, market, population, and allows us to work together with like-minded partners to create new business models and opportunities beyond Singapore. Technology, therefore, is really something that we need to embrace, and AI is no different.
Let me talk about two aspects of embracing AI. One is embracing AI in the economy, and in companies. We believe companies large and small, can use technology.
There was a very interesting piece of research, which won the Nobel Prize for economics this year, on creative innovation and economic growth.
One of the findings was about how small companies, are often the ones creating new business models and innovation. The American economy is a gold standard in terms of encouraging innovation and creative destruction, or creative innovation.
But one aspect of it that I think is important is that it is not just about innovation, but allowing small companies to challenge incumbents, and allowing small companies to innovate.
When small companies innovate, sometimes it also benefits the larger companies, because it is part of the larger ecosystem, and value chain.
AI is no different. We are helping companies, large and small, especially smaller companies that may not have large budget or in-house teams, to support them in their AI journey, access technology, and use them in a meaningful way.
It is not just about adapting and adopting technology but changing business processes and creating new values. So that is one part of adoption, not just working with big companies, but also all companies across the board.
We also have a different strategy for different companies.
For larger companies like MNCs, we work together to set up Centres of Excellence within companies, to help them push the frontier of AI innovation.
We extend our welcome to companies that are in the room to work together with us to set up these Centres of Excellence. It benefits the Singapore system when you have a critical mass of talent, ideas and technology.
For smaller companies, we embed it in many of our digitalization programs. For example, helping them adopt AI tools that are easily accessible. You may have a CRM software, an e-invoicing software, but you can easily embed AI functions in many of those tools easily, and you get a marked improvement in terms of productivity and innovation.
We are working with technology and service providers in different domains, including hospitality, manufacturing and healthcare, to curate a set of AI-enabled tools that can benefit our SMEs.
Let me just speak briefly about AI innovation as well. We want to work together with like-minded partners to innovate.
For example, before I came for this session, I launched the AI Global Impact Lab, the first global impact lab with a few companies coming together, to be one of the first AI labs in the world to put AI in IoT.
That exemplifies the kind of innovation I am talking about. Because innovation is really about the openness to working together across the entire value chain and ecosystem.
In Singapore, it's not just about finding partnerships across government and academia but also finding meaningful partnerships, across different domains and ecosystem to create new business models and new business value.
So AI adoption and innovation are two big pieces. I am also a firm believer that technology use cannot be the main goal.
At the end of the day, technology is about improving lives and making an impact. It's about transforming society for the better. In AI, there needs to be a balance internationally, across multiple stakeholders, both government, private sector, people sector, and across different economic regions, who come together even as we compete.
In businesses, we compete with one another to provide better services for clients. We compete to have better products and better innovation to do things better.
But even in competition, there is also a need for collaboration.
Because only with proper guard rails in place can proper innovation happen. You compete to have the fastest car, but we collaborate on the nicest car, in terms of road safety, so that ultimately people benefit from technology.
AI is no different. We compete on AI services; on who can have better AI products.
But if technology and AI is important, we find that willingness and ability to walk across boundaries, sectors, countries and multilateral institutions to work together to implement guardrails so the solutions that we produce with AI will be trusted, safe, secure, ethical, representative and work to improve lives.
To end off, Singapore is happy to be a responsible partner, a like-minded stakeholder in adoption, innovation and working together to put those algorithms.
Thank you.