
Singapore’s parliament has pledged that the country will not see jobless growth as artificial intelligence reshapes the economy, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday in coverage citing Channel NewsAsia.
The statement reaffirms the position Prime Minister Lawrence Wong took in February during the parliamentary debate on the 2026 Budget, and represents the most explicit commitment a major Asian economy has made on the AI-and-employment question to date.
Wong’s framing has been consistent. In his 26 February speech, the Prime Minister told MPs that the government would harness AI to grow the economy while ensuring that growth translates into good jobs and better wages. “These concerns are real and we must and we will take them seriously,” he said in response to opposition and backbench questions about worker anxieties around AI deployment.
The substantive question is whether Singapore can deliver on the pledge. Wong identified three specific concerns MPs had raised: that greater AI use could result in reduced employer investment in worker training, that older workers re-entering the workforce would face disproportionate barriers, and that entry-level professional and technical jobs could be hollowed out before structural responses can take effect. He said the government would act early to prevent each outcome rather than respond after the fact.
The current labour-market figures are favourable. The proportion of permanent employees in Singapore has reached a record high of nearly 91 per cent, with gains across most sectors. Job vacancies continue to outnumber job seekers, with more than 40 per cent of openings being entry-level professional, manager, executive, and technician roles. That is the kind of base from which a no-jobless-growth pledge is plausible to make. The harder question is whether the pattern persists as AI deployment accelerates.
Wong has paired the rhetorical commitment with concrete programme spending. The Champions of AI programme will provide tailored support, including enterprise transformation and workforce training, for firms aspiring to undertake comprehensive AI-driven business transformation. Four national AI missions have been identified across advanced manufacturing, connectivity and logistics, finance, and healthcare, with a National AI Council overseeing the development at the national level.
The labour movement has responded with its own policy demands. Labour MPs aligned with the National Trades Union Congress have called for AI-ready career pathways, stronger job-transition support for displaced workers, and explicit measures to ensure that AI-augmented workplaces remain inclusive of older and lower-skilled employees. The NTUC has historically operated in close alignment with the ruling People’s Action Party, and its parallel framing of the AI question reinforces rather than contests Wong’s position.
The wider economic context is also relevant. Wong’s February budget was framed around what the government has begun describing as “a more dangerous world,” with explicit reference to global trade fragmentation, US-China commercial tensions, and the broader uncertainty AI is introducing into white-collar labour markets across advanced economies.
His May Day Rally speech continued to use the AI-and-employment frame as one of the principal pillars of his government’s medium-term policy positioning.
What the pledge does not specify is what counts as “jobless growth” or what triggers a government intervention if the pattern emerges anyway. The technical definition matters because Singapore’s labour-market structure is unusually responsive to government-led adjustment, with active labour-market programmes, employer subsidies, and migration policy all available as policy instruments.
Wong’s commitment is, in effect, a promise that those instruments will be deployed proactively if the AI-deployment cycle starts to produce the structural pattern the pledge rules out.
The credibility test will be empirical. If Singapore’s overall employment rate, real wage growth, and entry-level hiring volumes all hold through the next several years of AI deployment, the no-jobless-growth pledge will look prescient.
If they do not, Wong’s government will face the political question of whether the policy framework moves fast enough to deliver on the commitment in practice. Wednesday’s parliamentary reaffirmation suggests the government is treating the question as a long-cycle commitment rather than a one-off rhetorical position.
