S’pore must brace itself for difficult times ahead, but Govt will do more to help if needed: PM Wong

Govt can’t protect every job in AI shift, but will protect every worker: PM Wong

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Prime Minister Lawrence Wong speaking at the May Day Rally on May 1.

Prime Minister Lawrence Wong speaking at the May Day Rally on May 1.

ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY

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SINGAPORE – As artificial intelligence disrupts entire industries, the Government may not be able to protect every job – but it will protect every worker, said Prime Minister Lawrence Wong.

To aid the AI transition, Singapore plans to scale up Company Training Committees (CTCs) across various sectors and companies, he said at the annual May Day Rally on May 1.

An NTUC initiative first mooted in February 2019, these committees bring together a company’s management and union representatives to figure out what skills employees need as businesses evolve, and to plan the training and job changes that follow. More than 3,800 have been formed.

CTCs can apply for funding through grants that support up to 70 per cent of the qualifying cost related to business transformation or training, and these grants have supported more than 900 projects as at 2026.

Because the CTC model has worked and delivered concrete results, the Government can take it further, said PM Wong. He noted that with AI, there is no one-size-fits-all solution as every sector is unique and companies face different constraints.

“But together, unions and employers can drive AI adoption for stronger growth and better jobs for our workers,” he said.

That is also why the Government, NTUC and the Singapore National Employers Federation (SNEF) have set up the Tripartite Jobs Council, PM Wong said.

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Announced the day before the rally, the council is meant to bring together resources, coordinate efforts and guide the AI transition. It will also ensure that the national push for AI “will always benefit workers,” he said.

Describing artificial intelligence as the “defining technology of our time”, PM Wong said its impact on workplaces will be much greater than previous waves of technological transformation.

Jobs will change, some will disappear, and the pace of change will be faster than anything Singapore has seen before, he told more than 1,600 union leaders and attendees at the rally in Downtown East.

“I cannot promise that there will be no disruption,” he said. “But this I can promise you: as our economy transforms, we will create new and better jobs. We may not be able to protect every job, but we will protect every worker.”

PM Wong said the Government will provide the tools, pathways, and support for workers to use AI.

“But we also need Singaporeans to step forward. Do not let anxiety or uncertainty hold you back from learning and using AI,” he said, urging people to master the technology.

Companies that embrace AI will stay competitive, and workers who build AI skills will have better opportunities and prospects, he added.

Singapore will take deliberate steps to ensure the benefits of AI are shared by all, said PM Wong as he outlined several moves to strengthen support for workers.

It is combining two government agencies overseeing skills upgrading into a new agency known as the Skills and Workforce Development Agency, he noted.

The Government is also strengthening SkillsFuture, and has implemented a support scheme for those who are involuntarily unemployed, he added.

PM Wong said many Singaporeans have told him they want to do more with AI, but they just do not know where to start.

That is why the Government is providing additional support, he added. “That is our commitment to Singaporeans. You make the effort, and we will be there for you – every step of the way.”

He said labour chief Ng Chee Meng will set out NTUC’s plans to help workers when Parliament sits next week, and the Government “will support this important work”.

AI has become a part of people’s daily lives and is already transforming how work is done at the frontier, PM Wong noted.

He cited the example of Google, where two years ago, 25 per cent of the search giant’s new code was written by AI. Today the figure is 75 per cent.

Beyond chatbots, there are now AI agents which do not just answer questions but can plan and execute complex tasks. Companies are already using these agents to manage social media, draft reports, and handle administrative work, he said. “These are workflows that used to require entire teams. Now a single person with AI agents can do all of that.”

The technology will not just impact productivity, but also disrupt and reshape entire industries, PM Wong said.

Singapore has formed the National AI Council to coordinate the national effort, so that the country is ready to succeed in this new environment, he said.

PM Wong, who is also Finance Minister, had in the February 2026 Budget announced this council – which he chairs – as well as other moves to incentivise Singaporeans to pick up AI-related skills through SkillsFuture courses and other tools.

Singapore’s goal is clear: to build deep AI capabilities, drive adoption across the economy and to make the country a hub for AI innovation.

This is ultimately to ensure that AI benefits every worker – with better jobs and better opportunities, he said.

Progress has been good, and leading global companies are strengthening their AI activities here, he said.

PM Wong again cited Google – which has been in Singapore since 2007. In 2025, the company established Google DeepMind here – their first AI research lab in South-east Asia.

Singapore will continue to attract more investments, not just from global tech leaders but also fast-growing start-ups in this space, PM Wong said.

He highlighted a company named Advanced Machine Intelligence, founded by leading AI scientist Yann LeCun. The firm uses Singapore as its base in Asia for their work harnessing AI to understand and interact with the real world.

“So as we attract more of these investments, as we grow our AI ecosystem, we will ensure that opportunities for Singaporeans expand correspondingly,” PM Wong said.

At the same time, Singapore is helping its own companies transform.

PM Wong cited DBS, which has embedded AI across its operations after starting to invest in the technology more than a decade ago. Today, the bank is training all its employees to use AI tools and many of them have benefited from this transformation, he added.

Singapore can do all this because of its unique advantage: tripartism, PM Wong said.

In many other countries, change leads to division where unions fight employers, businesses look after themselves and workers are left behind, he added.

But in Singapore, the Government, unions and employers work together – not as adversaries but as partners.

Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said in Singapore, the Government, unions and employers work together – not as adversaries but as partners.

ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY

For 65 years, the labour movement has walked alongside workers through every major economic shift – from industrialisation in the 1960s and 70s, to the computerisation wave in the 1980s and globalisation in the 1990s, PM Wong said.

It has also done so through crises, he said, citing the Asian Financial Crisis, SARS, the Global Financial Crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic. “We have overcome every wave of disruption. And we will do so again – together.”

PM Wong said the tripartite system works because of trust between different parties, even though they do not always agree. “In fact, there are hard conversations, even some ongoing now. Sometimes unions push, employers push back. Sometimes the Government may have certain concerns over a few suggestions.”

But the conversation does not break down and all parties continue talking and working at it, he added.

Singapore does not just blindly copy what others do, he said. “We develop our own innovative solutions – practical, effective and suited to our needs… this is the Singapore way.”

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S’pore must brace itself for difficult times ahead, but Govt will do more to help if needed: PM Wong

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Singapore is better prepared for crisis and in a much stronger position today, said PM Wong at the May Day Rally on May 1.

Singapore is better prepared for crisis and in a much stronger position today, said Prime Minister Lawrence Wong at the May Day Rally on May 1.

ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY

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SINGAPORE – Prime Minister Lawrence Wong pledged on May 1 that his Government would do more to help if the crisis worsened, but cautioned Singaporeans to brace themselves for a more difficult period ahead.

While the Government has moved quickly to put in place an initial response, it expects the situation arising from the conflict in the Middle East to become more challenging over the course of the year, he added.

“And if that happens, we will do more to help you,” said PM Wong in his May Day Rally speech.

“Because in times like this, Singaporeans can count on one thing – your Government will act. We will do so decisively, and we will stand with you, with every Singaporean, every step of the way.”

At the same time, the Republic can look ahead with quiet confidence, he said.

“We do not face this crisis from a position of weakness,” he said. “Singapore is better prepared, and in a much stronger position today.”

It is because of the efforts of workers, and the choices the country made decades ago, that Singapore can respond to the crisis from a position of strength, he told more than 1,600 union leaders and tripartite partners at the rally in Downtown East.

The conflict in the Middle East, which began on Feb 28 when the United States and Israel launched an attack on Iran, has forced the near-total closure of the Strait of Hormuz and crippled a large proportion of international trade flows.

Amid this crisis, Singapore is working closely with like-minded countries to strengthen supply chain resilience and provide mutual support, and is securing supply lines for energy and other essential goods, said PM Wong.

At the same time, the Government is stepping up support for Singaporeans and acted early in April to roll out a support package, he said.

Close to $1 billion was set aside to help cushion the impact of price increases for households and businesses, and provide broader support.

This included help for businesses most affected by higher energy prices as well as U-Save rebates, higher cash payouts and earlier CDC vouchers.

He encouraged companies to do what they can to support workers and help ease the burden on Singaporeans.

This ability to operate from a position of strength was one that was built up over time, he noted.

Hard choices were made early – Singapore managed its finances prudently and built up its reserves, he added.

It also worked to strengthen its energy resilience, such as by reclaiming land to build Jurong Island and developing its refining and petrochemical industries. Underground storage was also created in the Jurong Rock Caverns.

He said: “We had no oil, no natural gas, and no guarantee that any of this would work. But we pressed on and we built something that did not exist.”

Today, Singapore is a key node in global energy flows, and this gives the country a significant advantage, said PM Wong.

WP proposes wage subsidies for hiring new grads in apprenticeships amid AI concerns

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WP chief Pritam Singh called for better protection for all workers, given the anxieties over potential displacement in a volatile global economy.

WP chief Pritam Singh called for better protection for all workers, given the anxieties over potential displacement in a volatile global economy.

PHOTO: ST FILE

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  • The Workers' Party proposes temporary wage subsidies for firms hiring new graduates in apprenticeships. This addresses concerns about AI curtailing entry-level professional roles, ensuring youth gain vital experience.
  • The WP also reiterates its call for a universal redundancy insurance scheme for all income levels. This aims to provide a financial safety net for displaced workers, fostering innovation and economic stability.
  • The ruling PAP previously criticised WP's redundancy scheme due to financial costs. They advocate for the SkillsFuture Jobseeker Support scheme, targeting workers most in need.

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