Most countries are still arguing about whether AI will take jobs. Singapore just made a promise to stop it.
On Wednesday, Parliament passed a motion called "An AI Transition with No Jobless Growth." It binds the government, employers, and unions to one goal.
The goal is simple: AI can grow the economy, but it can't shrink the workforce. It's a bet on training at a scale almost no other country has tried.
The Plan
The motion came from Ng Chee Meng. He runs Singapore's national labor union, NTUC, and is a member of Parliament for Jalan Kayu.
He laid out four steps to keep workers in jobs as AI rolls in. The biggest step is training.
NTUC pledged more than 1 million AI course spots in the coming years. That's roughly one for every six people in Singapore.
The plan also tells workers in advance which jobs AI will hit first. So they can switch tracks before they get cut.
The SkillsFuture Jobseeker scheme is also getting bigger. It pays workers between gigs while they retrain.
The Union Training Assistance plan gets a boost too. It gives union members more cheap AI courses.
Why It Matters
Singapore is small, with about 6 million people. That makes it easier to line up workers, bosses, and lawmakers around one plan.
Prime Minister Lawrence Wong has said for months that AI growth can't cost jobs. Wednesday's vote turned that pitch into a real promise.
MP Yip Hon Weng also joined the debate. He said the real block isn't the tech, but workers being ready to use it.
He pushed for AI fluency, not just AI access. He also asked the government to tie funding to real worker results.
Other lawmakers backed that call. They want clear tracking of how many workers find new roles after retraining.
The Bigger Picture
Other governments are watching how this plays out. The U.S. has no AI workforce plan, while the EU is focused on AI rules instead of training.
For investors, the signal is clear. Singapore wants to be where AI gets built, not where AI gets blocked.
The country has been pulling in data centers, chip plants, and AI startups since 2024. Microsoft, Google, and Nvidia have all sent money its way on the back of that pitch.
Wednesday's vote tells global firms that the workers will be ready when they show up.
What To Watch
The motion is non-binding. But it sets the path for budget plans, training funds, and how Singapore reacts when AI starts taking real jobs.
Wong's team will deliver the next piece in the coming budget round. The size of the AI training spend is the number to watch.
Singapore is treating AI like an input. Most countries are still treating it like a threat.
For investors with bets on Asia, the lesson is that AI growth and job growth don't have to fight. Singapore is the first major economy to put that idea on paper.
The country also tends to set policy trends that other Asian markets pick up later. Watch for similar plans in Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan in the months ahead.
