MDDI 演讲稿 · 2024-03-01

高级政务部长陈杰豪在2024年供给委员会辩论上的演讲

高级政务部长陈杰豪在2024年供给委员会辩论上的演讲

Tan Kiat How · MDDI 高级政务部长 · How在供应委员会辩论上的发言

要点

  • 新加坡数字经济增加值从2017年的580亿元(占GDP 13%)增至2022年的1060亿元(占GDP 17%),同期中小企业数字化采用率从74%升至2023年的95%,60%的小贩摊主已接受SGQR数字支付,每月平均撮合510万笔交易、金额达4200万元。
  • MDDI即将推出《数字企业蓝图》,围绕三大支柱——「更智能」(AI赋能)、「更快扩张」(整合方案)与「更安全」(网络韧性)——引导企业在AI时代升级,蓝图将作为动态文件持续更新。
  • 资讯通信媒体发展局「中小企业数字化」计划中约20%的预核准方案已内嵌AI能力,2023年逾3000家中小企业采用这些AI方案;同时新设「生成式AI × 数字领袖」项目,协助成熟企业与科技巨头合作自主研发生成式AI解决方案。
  • 「行业数字化方案」已从2018年的5个行业扩展至22个,将陆续更新以纳入各行业专属AI解决方案;「首席技术官即服务」平台累计服务超9.2万用户,逾1600家中小企业受惠于数字顾问服务。
  • 为解决企业因系统割裂而无法跨平台扩张的问题,资讯通信媒体发展局将在「中小企业数字化」计划中增加整合型、云原生数字方案,并对这些方案提出更高的互操作性要求。
  • 网络安全局调查显示超过八成新加坡企业每年遭遇至少一起网络事件,仅三分之一企业落实了「网络基础认证」五类措施的一半以上;政府将以三层方式应对:推出网络健康检测工具、「首席信息安全官即服务」方案(目前已有55家中小企业受惠),以及行业专属网络安全指引。

完整译文(中文)

MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21

主席先生,我们在经济数字化方面已取得良好进展。新加坡数字经济在2022年创造了1060亿新元的增加值,约占名义GDP的17%,高于2017年的580亿新元(占GDP的13%)。越来越多的企业走向数字化。例如,如今超过十分之九的企业使用电子支付,而2018年这一比例仅为十分之六。企业也在部署更先进的数字解决方案,如云计算和数据分析。

重要的是,我很欣慰地看到我们的中小企业(SMEs)也在积极推进数字化。2023年,95%的中小企业采用了数字解决方案,而2018年这一比例为74%。就连小贩也加入其中。截至去年11月,60%的小贩接受SGQR数字支付。该平台平均每月促成510万笔交易,金额达4200万新元。

IMDA的SMEs Go Digital和Hawkers Go Digital等计划推动了这一进展。

与此同时,技术进步的步伐——尤其是人工智能(AI)领域——正在加速。我们希望为企业和工人提供把握这一新浪潮所需的能力。

我们正在制定《数字企业蓝图》(DEB),以规划下一阶段的工作方向,这也是谢耀荃议员所询问的内容。

我们已与行业伙伴和业界进行了广泛磋商。

我们正在根据各方反馈完善该蓝图,并将在未来数月内发布咨询文件,以征求更广泛的业界和公众意见。

但请允许我借此机会概述该蓝图的大致框架。

《数字企业蓝图》旨在"在人工智能时代提升我们的企业和工人能力"。

我们将通过三大方向实现这一目标:第一,通过使用人工智能驱动的数字解决方案,赋能企业"更智慧"(Be Smarter);第二,通过采用综合数字解决方案,支持企业"更快扩展"(Scale Faster);第三,通过提升网络安全韧性,装备企业"更安全"(Be Safer)。

即:更智慧、更快扩展、更安全。

《数字企业蓝图》是一份动态文件,将持续更新。因此,我们已开始推行一些获得广泛支持的"无悔之举"。

陈慧玲女士、陈佩玲女士、沙拉伊·塔哈先生、马克·李先生等人询问了我们如何支持中小企业从人工智能中受益。

我们将通过IMDA的SMEs Go Digital计划,帮助企业和工人获益于人工智能能力。

首先,针对绝大多数中小企业,IMDA整理了一份适合广泛采用的预批准数字解决方案名单。

我们已开始与科技业界合作,将人工智能能力融入其数字解决方案。我很高兴地告知,截至今日,约20%的预批准解决方案已具备人工智能功能。

例如,人工智能能力已无缝整合到客户关系管理解决方案中,可帮助企业分析客户互动和数据,为客户推荐有针对性的营销活动。

2023年,逾3000家中小企业已采用并受益于这些具备人工智能功能的预批准解决方案。以上是针对广大中小企业的举措。

其次,在行业层面,IMDA已与行业牵头机构合作,共同制定《行业数字化计划》(IDPs),作为企业的路线图,重点列出满足该行业特定需求的解决方案。

我们于2018年启动了5项IDPs。如今,我们已针对各行业制定了22项IDPs,涵盖批发、建筑、零售和餐饮等行业。这些IDPs覆盖了我国经济的广泛领域。

IMDA将更新IDPs,纳入与满足相关行业企业需求相关的人工智能解决方案。

我们已在四项已启动或更新的IDPs中开始推进这项工作,分别涵盖法律、旅游(景点)、零售和安保行业。

一个很好的例子是Ghows LLC律师事务所,该事务所一直在使用一款具备人工智能功能的校对工具,协助检查合同草稿中的冲突和不一致之处。据律师反映,这一流程过去须手动完成,繁琐、耗时且容易出错。采用该工具后,Ghows的生产力提升了50%,错误也有所减少。

我们将逐步更新所有IDPs,纳入针对特定行业的人工智能解决方案,以便企业从这些有用的解决方案中受益。

陈佩玲女士询问了CTO-as-a-Service(CTOaaS)平台。超过92000名用户已访问CTO-as-a-Service平台上的资源,逾1600家中小企业从数字咨询服务中受益。

一个例子是餐饮企业西门街(Xi Men Jie)。该公司面对市场上众多的科技解决方案不知所措。该团队向CTO-as-a-Service计划下的数字顾问寻求帮助,以整合其数字系统。该公司在人力节省和销售增长方面均实现了15%的提升。

我鼓励所有中小企业善用这些计划。

对于希望更进一步的企业,我们正通过"高级数字解决方案"(Advanced Digital Solutions)计划为其提供支持,该计划汇聚科技生态系统,为行业牵头机构所识别的关键问题提供定制解决方案。

我们还为企业推出了两项新计划,以积累使用生成式人工智能(GenAI)的经验。

第一项是由IMDA和EnterpriseSG共同推出的计划,为一批试点中小企业提供13项专门挑选的生成式人工智能解决方案,涵盖营销与销售等常见业务职能。

如果这些生成式AI解决方案被证明确实有用,我们将把它们纳入"中小企业数字化"计划的预审批数字解决方案名单,以惠及更多企业。

现在介绍第二项计划。这一计划面向规模较大、数字化成熟度较高、希望在自身业务中开发和部署生成式AI数字解决方案的企业。

IMDA正在推出一项名为"生成式AI X(读作'for')数字领导者"的新举措,科技合作伙伴(包括科技巨头)将与参与企业携手合作,帮助其开发和实施创新性生成式AI解决方案。

我们已经看到企业对此表现出初步兴趣,欢迎更多企业报名参与这一举措。

下面我来谈谈第二个着力方向——支持企业更快地实现规模化发展。

在我们的咨询过程中,中小企业反映,随着业务开始增长,他们意识到自身受制于数字解决方案互操作性和可扩展性的不足。

以餐饮服务中小企业Bread Createur为例,该企业随着时间推移陆续采用了多种销售渠道和配送平台。然而,他们发现自己无法跨第三方配送平台和销售渠道自动汇总订单、追踪销售数据。对小型业务而言不过是小小的不便,当企业规模扩大后却迅速演变为发展的绊脚石。

这种各自为政的"烟囱式"解决方案也使企业无法充分发挥数字化的潜力,包括通过数据分析获取业务洞察。

我们将加大力度:(一)在"中小企业数字化"计划下纳入更多集成数字解决方案;(二)尽可能为这些解决方案规定互操作性要求;(三)鼓励更多解决方案采用云原生架构,以实现更强的可扩展性。

若市场上尚无现成的集成解决方案,我们将通过"先进数字解决方案"计划来甄选和提供此类方案。

以向餐饮服务中小企业提供的Connected Business Suite解决方案为例,它使这些中小企业能够以集成方式运营前端和后端功能。

借助这一集成解决方案,Bread Createur可以轻松追踪不同销售渠道的所有销售和交易情况,包括直接路由至厨房的第三方订单。

在此,我必须强调,技术并非万能,集成化、可扩展的数字解决方案同样需要各行业和企业重新设计流程与运营模式。

展望未来,我们将与各行业主导机构和协会密切合作,推出更多预审批的集成化、基于云端的数字解决方案,以支持企业在成长过程中快速扩大规模。

下面我来谈谈第三个着力方向——更安全。

我很高兴看到,CSA最新网络安全调查结果显示,75%的机构意识到了网络安全的重要性。

然而,尽管企业正在采取措施改善其网络安全卫生状况,但仍有很大的改进空间。

同一调查发现,新加坡超过十分之八的企业在一年内遭遇了至少一起网络安全事件,其中几乎所有企业都受到了负面业务影响。

CSA还发现,在CSA网络安全基础(Cyber Essentials)认证计划所涵盖的五类网络安全措施中,仅有三分之一的机构落实了半数以上的措施。缺乏如何实施网络安全解决方案的相关知识,被普遍列为一大挑战。

陈佩玲女士和谢耀荃先生询问我们将如何帮助中小企业提升网络韧性。我们将在《数字企业蓝图》中详加阐述。请允许我简要介绍我们三层次方法的总体思路。

第一,我们将支持中小企业采取措施,改善其网络安全卫生状况。

我们将推出一款网络安全健康检查工具,供企业评估自身网络安全卫生状况、与同行进行基准比较,并获取相关资源以弥补不足。

需要更多支持的企业可利用首席信息安全官(CISO)即服务计划,聘请网络安全顾问制定量身定制的网络安全健康计划。

符合条件的企业可获得联合资助,以分担该服务的费用。迄今已有55家中小企业从这一计划中受益。

第二,我们将从源头入手,提升企业所使用数字系统的网络安全标准。这将尤其惠及没有内部网络安全资源的中小企业。我们将从IMDA"中小企业数字化"计划下的预审批数字解决方案入手。

第三,我们还将与各行业主导机构合作,制定特定行业的网络安全指引。例如在医疗卫生领域,CSA与MOH合作制定了网络安全指引,以提升医疗服务提供者的安全态势。

我们将在《数字企业蓝图》(DEB)中分享更多详情。

主席先生,我简要介绍了《数字企业蓝图》的三大着力方向,旨在通过更智慧、更快规模化和更安全,在人工智能时代提升企业和劳动者的能力。

下面我来谈谈我们如何在劳动力中培育科技能力。

在更广泛的劳动力层面,我们中的更多人需要掌握合适的技能,以在工作中有效运用数字工具。面对日新月异的技术变革,我们需要将再培训和技能提升视为职场文化的组成部分,并将其视为对自身的持续投资。

雇主也必须将员工的技能再培训和技能提升视为投资,以便充分发挥数码系统的能力并从中获益。打个比方,就好比拥有一辆马力强劲的汽车,却只能挂一档行驶——我们需要提升员工的技能,才能充分利用这台强大的引擎。这正是每份产业数码化蓝图不仅为企业提供一套精选数码解决方案,同时也附带一份针对这些数码工具的完整相关培训课程清单的原因。

例如,零售业产业数码化蓝图(IDP)包含培训课程,帮助员工学习如何充分运用社交商务解决方案以增加销售额,包括如何在直播中销售商品。

资讯通信媒体发展局(IMDA)也与新加坡技能创前程(SkillsFuture Singapore)合作,为许多此类课程提供资金支持。我鼓励雇主和员工充分利用这些计划。

充足且高质量的科技人才,对于实现我们的目标同样至关重要。

正如陈佩玲女士所提出的,鉴于各大科技公司的裁员情况,各界对科技行业前景感到忧虑,这是可以理解的。

面对更具挑战性的经济环境,全球各地的企业正在对运营进行合理布局和规模调整,以优先发展新的增长领域。遗憾的是,这有时会导致裁员,对当事人而言可能极为痛苦和困扰。

新加坡也不例外,同样出现了科技公司裁员的情况,受影响者主要是从事非科技岗位的员工。

幸运的是,新加坡仍是许多科技公司全球战略中的重要节点。随着这些公司在本区域深化和扩大业务,我们预计新加坡对科技人才的需求将持续增长。

目前,科技人才的需求依然强劲,科技岗位在全经济体总就业人数中的占比持续上升,从2018年的4.5%增至2023年的5.2%。

这一增长由资讯通信(I&C)行业和非资讯通信行业的需求共同驱动,其中后者在2023年约占科技岗位总数的57%。

随着更多企业推进数码化,包括采用人工智能(AI)等更先进的数码解决方案,预计这也将进一步推动对科技人才的需求。

这些对新加坡人来说都是优质工作——资讯与数码技术课程的大学毕业生持续拥有最高的毕业起薪中位数,达每月5,500新元。

陈慧敏女士、陈佩玲女士、严燕松先生和沙拉尔·塔哈先生就我们将如何确保稳定的科技人才输送管道提出了疑问。

约瑟芬部长早前谈及培育人工智能人才和具备人工智能技能的工作者的相关工作,包括提升现有的科技技能加速器(TeSA)计划的努力——该计划迄今已将逾17,000名本地人安置于科技岗位,并为逾231,000名专业人员提供了技能提升和再培训。

我们也在积极努力,提升工艺教育学院(ITE)和理工学院毕业生在科技领域的就业成果,并为他们的整个职业生涯提供更多发展路径。

IMDA于2022年成立了面向工艺教育学院和理工学院的科技技能加速器联盟(TIP Alliance),汇聚志同道合的合作伙伴——包括学校领导层、科技行业协会,以及NCS、Accenture和ST Engineering等科技人才主要雇主,共同推动变革。

令我感到欣慰的是,雇主正在转变思维方式和人力资源实践。雇主不再仅仅看重学历资历,而是充分重视应聘者的技能与能力,以评估其适合程度。

为推动整个行业的变革,IMDA与TIP Alliance共同发起了以技能为本的招聘运动,并配套发布了一本手册,为企业提供实用指导,帮助其基于能力吸引、评估和培育科技人才。

短短三个月内,承诺支持以技能为本招聘的企业数量从100家翻倍增至200家。

Oracle是承诺支持以技能为本招聘运动的企业之一,并已开始依据技能招聘空缺职位。作为对这一理念承诺的体现,其招聘团队已选择不在新加坡所有技术岗位的职位招聘广告中突出列明学历要求。

Accenture是另一家采用以技能为本招聘方式的企业。他们采用了严格的多阶段评估机制,专注于技能、能力和成长潜力,结果证明招聘周期缩短了75%,高质量人才输送管道扩大了40%。

以技能为本的招聘方式与我们作为"新加坡携手前进"(Forward SG)一部分所推动的转变相契合——即超越成绩的学习理念,并创造多元化的发展路径。

各院校正努力确保科技专业学生获得更多与行业相关的实践经验。例如,工艺教育学院和理工学院的资讯与数码技术(IDT)院系已将实习期从6个月延长至12个月。

2023年,逾400名理工学院和工艺教育学院学生参与了为期一年的实习,以积累更丰富的行业经验。我们通过提供联合资助以覆盖培训费用,支持提供此类全年实习机会的企业。

黄佩雯女士是该计划的受益者之一。就读义安理工学院期间,她以全栈开发员的身份在华侨银行(OCBC)参与了为期一年的实习,负责仪表板和架构项目,以提升运营效率。黄佩雯发现项目的规模令她大开眼界。与院校内规模较小的项目相比,这次实习让她接触到更为复杂的系统及其相互关联。这段经历拓展了她对充满活力的科技行业及其众多令人振奋的职业发展路径的认识。

人工智能让我们在现有的数码基础上更上一层楼。除了为我们的企业带来新的竞争优势,也能提高员工的生产力 – 如虎添翼。因此,政府将协助企业,尤其是中小企业和员工,让他们掌握人工智能,从中获益。

到目前为止,资媒局已经推出了 22 个产业数码化蓝图。该局接下来在更新蓝图时,也会加入人工智能的部分。此外,在中小企业数码化计划下,资媒局也会在当局预先批准的数码解决方案中,纳入人工智能技术。如今,有两成的数码解决方案是由人工智能推动的,超过 3000 家中小企业已经从中受益。更重要的是,我们将会和各界合作,策划相关的培训课程,协助工友掌握技能,与时俱进,把握人工智能所带来的新机遇。

议长先生,新加坡不具备许多其他经济体所拥有的天然优势。我们没有庞大的国内市场,没有可资利用的庞大本地劳动力,也没有丰富的自然资源。但我们可以凭借灵活敏捷的姿态,充分发挥数码化乃至人工智能等科技赋能手段,实现以小博大。

为持续为企业拓展机遇、为新加坡人创造优质且令人振奋的工作岗位,我们将在坚实的基础上继续前行。在数码化历程的下一阶段,政府将成为企业和员工在人工智能时代的坚定伙伴,携手提升企业和员工的能力。这将是一段令人期待的旅程,因此我欢迎更多志同道合的伙伴与我们携手合作,并邀请所有企业和员工共同踏上这段精彩的前行之路。谢谢。

演讲稿PDF版本

英文原文

MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21

Mr Chairman, we have made good progress in digitalising our economy. Singapore’s digital economy generated value-added of $106 billion dollars in 2022 or about 17 % of our nominal GDP, up from $58 billion or 13% of our GDP in 2017. More enterprises are going digital. For example, more than 9 in 10 enterprises are using e-payment today compared to just 6 in 10 in 2018. Enterprises are also deploying more advanced digital solutions, such as cloud computing and data analytics.

Importantly, I am heartened that our SMEs are doing so too. 95% of SMEs adopted digital solutions in 2023 compared to 74% in 2018. Even hawkers are coming on board. As of November last year, 60% of our hawkers accept SGQR digital payments. The platform has facilitated an average of 5.1 million transactions, or $42 million per month.

IMDA’s programmes like SMEs Go Digital and Hawkers Go Digital have moved the needle.

At the same time, the pace of technological advancements especially in AI is picking up pace. We want to equip our enterprises and workers with the capabilities to ride this new wave.

We are developing a Digital Enterprise Blueprint (DEB) to chart the next bound of our effort, which Mr Xie Yao Quan asked about.

We have been consulting extensively with sector partners and industry.

We are refining the Blueprint based on their feedback and will put out a consultation paper in the coming months to seek views from the wider industry and from the public.

But let me take the opportunity to outline the broad contours of the Blueprint.

The Digital Enterprise Blueprint aims to ‘Uplift our enterprises and workers in the Age of AI’.

We will do this through 3 thrusts: First, we will empower enterprises to Be Smarter through using AI-powered digital solutions. Second, we will support our enterprises to Scale Faster through adoption of integrated digital solutions. Third, we will equip enterprises to Be Safer by improving their cyber resilience.

So Smarter, Scale faster and Safer.

The Digital Enterprise Blueprint is a live document which will be continually updated. Hence, we have started to implement some ‘no regrets’ moves that received broad support.

Ms Jessica Tan, Ms Tin Pei Ling, Mr Sharael Taha and Mr Mark Lee and others asked how we are supporting SMEs to benefit from AI.

We will help enterprises and workers access benefits from AI capabilities through IMDA’s SMEs Go Digital programme.

First, for the vast majority of SMEs, IMDA curates a list of pre-approved digital solutions suitable for broad based adoption.

We have started working with tech industry to incorporate AI capabilities in their digital solutions. I am glad to share that as of today, around 20% of these pre-approved solutions are already AI-enabled.

For example, AI capabilities are integrated seamlessly into customer relationship management solutions, which can help enterprises analyse customer interactions and data to suggest constrained marketing campaigns for customers.

In 2023, over 3,000 SMEs have adopted and benefitted from these AI-enabled pre-approved solutions. So that’s for the broad base of SMEs.

Second, at the sector-level, IMDA has worked with sector leads to co-develop Industry Digital Plans (IDPs) which serve as roadmaps for enterprises, highlighting solutions which meet specific needs of the sector.

We started with 5 IDPs in 2018. Today we have 22 IDPs for various sectors, including sectors like wholesale, construction, retail and food services. These IDPs cover a broad swathe of our economy.

IMDA will refresh the IDPs to incorporate AI-enabled solutions that would be relevant to meet the needs of the enterprises in that sector.

We have started doing so in the 4 IDPs that we either launched or refreshed, namely Legal, Tourism (Attractions), Retail and Security sectors.

One good example is Ghows LLC is a law firm that has been using an AI-enabled proofreading tool to help check their draft contracts for conflicts and inconsistencies. I understand from the lawyers that this process used to be done manually and was tedious, time-consuming and error prone. After adopting this tool, Ghows saw a 50% productivity improvement and less errors.

We will progressively refresh all IDPs to include sector-specific AI solutions, so that enterprises can benefit from these useful solutions.

Ms Tin asked about CTO-as-a-Service (CTOaaS) platform. Over 92,000 users have accessed resources from the CTO-as-a-Service platform and over 1,600 SMEs have benefited from the digital consultancy services.

One example is food services company, Xi Men Jie (西门街). The company was overwhelmed by the numerous tech solutions in the market. The team turned to a digital consultant under the CTO-as-a-Service scheme for help to integrate their digital systems. The company achieved 15% in both manpower savings and sales growth.

I encourage all SMEs to tap on these schemes.

For enterprises who want to do more, we are supporting them through our Advanced Digital Solutions scheme, which brings together the technology ecosystem to curate solutions for key problems identified by sector leads.

We also launched two new schemes for enterprises to gain experience using GenAI.

The first is a programme by IMDA and EnterpriseSG to provide a pilot group of SMEs with access to 13 specially curated generative AI solutions for common business functions like Marketing and Sales.

If these Gen AI solutions prove useful, we will include them in the SMEs Go Digital pre-approved list of digital solutions to benefit others.

Now for the second scheme. For larger and more digitally mature enterprises looking to develop and deploy their own Gen AI digital solutions in their businesses.

IMDA is launching a new initiative called Generative AI X (pronounced ‘for’) Digital Leaders where tech partners, including tech giants, will work with participating enterprises to help them develop and implement innovative generative AI solutions.

We have already seen early interest from enterprises, and we welcome more to sign up for this initiative.

Let me move on to the second thrust – supporting our enterprises to scale faster.

In our consultations, SMEs shared that as they started to grow, they realised that they were constrained by lack of interoperability and scalability of their digital solutions.

For example, Bread Createur, a food services SME had adopted various sales channels and delivery platforms over time. However, they found themselves unable to collate orders automatically and track sales figures across their third-party delivery platforms and sales channels. What was an inconvenience for a small operation quickly turned into a showstopper when they grew.

Such stove-piped solutions also prevent enterprises from harnessing the full potential of digital, including deriving business insights from data analytics.

We will step up our effort to (a) include more integrated digital solutions under the SMEs Go Digital programme, (b) stipulate inter-operability requirements where possible for these solutions, and (c) encourage more of these solutions to be cloud native for greater scalability.

Where integrated solutions are not available in the market, we will curate such solutions through the Advanced Digital Solutions scheme.

An example is the Connected Business Suite solution available to Food Services SMEs. It enabled these SMEs to operate their frontend and backend functions in an integrated manner.

With this integrated solution, Bread Createur can easily track all their sales and transactions across different sales channels, including from third party orders that are routed directly to the kitchen.

At this juncture, I must stress that technology is not the silver bullet, and integrated and scalable digital solutions would also require the sectors and enterprises to redesign processes and operations.

Going forward, we will work closely with sector leads and associations to introduce more pre-approved integrated and cloud-based digital solutions to support our enterprises to scale quickly as they grow.

Let me move to the third thrust - Be Safer.

I am heartened to see that in CSA’s latest Cybersecurity Survey findings, 75% of organisations were aware of the importance of cybersecurity.

However, while enterprises are taking steps to improve their cyber hygiene, there is still much room for improvement.

The same survey found that over 8 in 10 enterprises in Singapore encountered at least one cybersecurity incident in a year, almost all of them suffered negative business impacts.

CSA also found that only 1 in 3 organisations implemented more than half of the 5 categories of cybersecurity measures under CSA’s Cyber Essentials certification scheme. Lack of knowledge on how to implement cybersecurity solutions was commonly cited as a challenge.

Ms Tin Pei Ling and Mr Xie Yao Quan asked how we will help SMEs improve their cyber resilience. We will flesh this out in the Digital Enterprise Blueprint. Let me give a broad sense of our three-tier approach.

First, we will support SMEs in taking steps to improve their cyber hygiene.

We will launch a cybersecurity health check tool for enterprises to assess their cyber hygiene, benchmark themselves against their industry peers and access resources for them to plug the gaps.

Those who require more support can tap on the Chief Information Security Officer (CISO)-as-a-Service scheme to engage cybersecurity consultants to develop tailored cybersecurity health plans.

Enterprises that are eligible can receive co-funding support to defray the cost for this service. 55 SMEs have benefitted from this scheme thus far.

Second, we will go upstream and raise the cybersecurity standards of the digital systems used by our enterprises. This will especially benefit SMEs with no in-house cybersecurity resources. We will start with the pre-approved digital solutions under IMDA’s SMEs Go Digital programme.

Thirdly, we will also work with sector-leads to develop industry-specific guidelines for cybersecurity. In healthcare, for example, CSA worked with MOH to develop cybersecurity guidelines to improve the security posture amongst healthcare providers.

We will share more details in the DEB.

Mr Chairman, I spoke briefly about the three thrusts of the Digital Enterprise Blueprint to uplift enterprises and workers in the Age of AI by Being Smarter, Scale Faster and Becoming Safer.

Let me turn to how we are developing tech capabilities within our workforce.

At the broader workforce level, more of us will need to be equipped with the right skills to effectively use digital tools in our work. With more rapid technological changes, we need to see reskilling and upskilling as part of our workplace culture and see this as a continual investment in ourselves.

Employers must also view the reskilling and upskilling of their employees as investments so as to fully harness the capabilities of and benefit from their digital systems. An analogy would be like having a very powerful car but not being able to go beyond first gear, we need to upskill our employees so we can make full use of that powerful engine. That is why each Industry Digital Plan does not only include a suite of curated digital solutions for enterprises, but also comes with a comprehensive list of relevant training courses for these digital tools.

For example, the retail IDP includes courses for employees to learn how to fully use social commerce solutions to generate more sales, including how to sell items on livestreams.

IMDA has also worked with SkillsFuture Singapore to provide funding support for many of these courses. I encourage employers and workers to make full use of these schemes.

Sufficient quality and quantity of tech talent is also crucial to realizing our ambitions.

Understandably, there have been concerns about prospects in the tech sector, given the layoffs by major technology companies, as raised by Ms Tin Pei Ling.

Companies across the world have been right siting and right sizing their operations to prioritise new areas of growth, amid a more challenging economic climate. Unfortunately, this sometimes results in layoffs which can be very painful and distressing for those involved.

Singapore is no exception and has similarly seen some layoffs by tech companies, which have largely impacted those in non-tech roles.

Fortunately, Singapore remains as a key node in many of these tech company’s global strategies. As they deepen and expand their involvement in the region, we expect that demand for tech talent in Singapore will continue to grow.

Currently, the demand for tech talent remains strong, with tech jobs across the economy accounting for a rising share of total employment, from 4.5% in 2018 to 5.2% in 2023.

This was driven by demand from both the I&C sector and non-I&C sectors, with the latter accounting for around 57% of tech jobs in 2023.

As more companies adopt digital, including using more advanced digital solutions like AI, we expect this will also fuel demand for tech talent.

And these are good jobs for Singaporeans – university graduates of information and digital technologies courses continue to take home the highest median monthly starting pay at $5,500 per month.

Ms Jessica Tan, Ms Tin Pei Ling, Mr Alex Yam and Mr Sharael Taha have asked about how we will ensure a steady pipeline of tech talent.

Minister Josephine spoke earlier about efforts to develop a pipeline of AI talent and AI-equipped workers, including efforts to enhance the existing TechSkills Accelerator (TeSA) initiative, which to date has placed more than 17,000 locals into tech jobs and upskilled and reskilled more than 231,000 professionals.

We are also working hard to strengthen ITE and Polytechnic graduates’ employment outcomes in tech, and provide more development pathways for them throughout their careers.

IMDA set up the TeSA for ITE and Polytechnics Alliance (TIP Alliance) in 2022 to bring together like-minded partners – school leadership, tech industry associations and leading employers of tech manpower like NCS, Accenture, and ST Engineering, to come together to drive change.

I am heartened that employers are changing their mindset and HR practices. Instead of just looking at academic qualifications, employers are giving sufficient weight to the applicants’ skills and capabilities to assess their suitability.

To push for change across the industry, IMDA and the TIP Alliance launched the Skills-Based Hiring Movement, together with a handbook providing practical guidance for firms to attract, assess and develop tech talent based on competencies.

Within three months, the number of companies pledging their support for skills-based hiring doubled from 100 to 200.

Oracle is an example of a company that has pledged its support for the skills- based hiring movement and has been recruiting based on skills for their openings. As part of their commitment to this approach, their recruitment team has chosen not to highlight the education requirement in their job postings for all technical roles in Singapore.

Accenture is another company that has adopted skills-based hiring. They adopted a rigorous multi-stage assessment focusing on skills, competencies, and growth potential, which proved to reduce Time-to-Hire by 75%, and increased quality talent pipelines by 40%.

The skills-based hiring approach aligns with the shifts that we are making as part of Forward SG to embrace learning beyond grades and create diverse pathways.

Schools are working to ensure students in tech gain more industry-relevant experience. For instance, the Information and Digital Technologies (IDT) schools in our ITE and Polytechnics have lengthened internship durations from 6 to 12 months.

In 2023, more than 400 Polytechnic and ITE students undertook year-long internships to gain greater industry experience. We support companies who provide these year-long internships, by providing co-funding to cover the cost of training.

Ms Queenie Ng is a beneficiary of this programme. While at Ngee Ann Polytechnic, she embarked on a year-long internship with OCBC as a full stack developer, working on dashboards and architecture projects to improve operational efficiency. Queenie found the scale of the projects to be eye-opening. In contrast to the smaller scale school projects, the internship exposed her to more complex systems and their interconnections. This experience expanded her understanding of the dynamic tech industry and the many exciting career paths it offers.

人工智能让我们在现有的数码基础上更上一层楼。除了为我们的企业带来新的竞争优势,也能提高员工的生产力 – 如虎添翼。因此,政府将协助企业,尤其是中小企业和员工,让他们掌握人工智能,从中获益。

到目前为止,资媒局已经推出了 22 个产业数码化蓝图。该局接下来在更新蓝图时,也会加入人工智能的部分。此外,在中小企业数码化计划下,资媒局也会在当局预 先批准的数码解决方案中,纳入人工智能技术。如今,有两成的数码解决方案是由人工智能推动的,超过 3000 家中小企业已经从中受益。更重要的是,我们将会和 各界合作,策划相关的培训课程,协助工友掌握技能,与时俱进,把握人工智能所带来的新机遇。

Sir, Singapore does not have the natural advantages of many other economies. We do not have a sizable domestic market, a large local workforce to tap on, natural resources but we can well punch above our weight by being agile and making full use of technological enablers like digital and now AI.

To continue enlarging opportunities for enterprises and creating good and exciting jobs for Singaporeans, we are building on a very strong foundation and the government will be a steadfast partner for enterprises and workers in the next phase of our digitalisation journey to uplift enterprises and workers in an age of AI. It will be an exciting journey, so I welcome more likeminded partners to work together with us and invite all enterprises and workers to join us on this exciting journey ahead. Thank you.

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