Vietnam workers keenest on AI in South-east Asia; Singapore employees among most sceptical: survey

Vietnam workers keenest on AI in South-east Asia; Singapore employees among most sceptical: survey


The Republic’s labour force doubts AI’s productive capacity, and is wary about its impact on job security

[SINGAPORE] Workers in Vietnam are among the world’s most frequent users of artificial intelligence, and the most optimistic in South-east Asia about the impact of AI on their jobs, a survey by multinational human resource service provider Automatic Data Processing (ADP) has found.

And new data provided by ADP to The Business Times indicates that Singapore workers are far more sceptical about the impact of AI on their daily productivity than their regional peers. They are also the most wary in South-east Asia about the potential of AI to disrupt their job security.

The survey findings, released in May, came from a poll of more than 39,000 working adults in 36 markets worldwide; of the total, 13,136 respondents were from the Asia-Pacific.

In the broader Asia-Pacific region, ADP told BT that many emerging markets are generally more optimistic than developed markets about the potential for AI to have a positive impact on their jobs.

Jessica Zhang, senior vice-president for the Asia-Pacific in ADP, said at a media briefing on Wednesday (Jun 17) that emerging markets in Asia are typically more willing to adopt AI technologies than more developed countries such as Australia and Singapore, which tend to be more prudent in their use of AI.

“When a lot of things are new (in emerging markets), you see people adapt to them faster,” she said. “Workers in more mature markets like Singapore want to see proof that productivity is improving before confidence levels rise.”

In Singapore, just 15 per cent of workers strongly agreed that AI would have a positive effect on their job responsibilities in the coming year. This was the lowest level of optimism among five South-east Asian markets surveyed.

In Vietnam, 29 per cent of workers express high optimism, followed by Thailand and Indonesia (both at 23 per cent), and the Philippines, with 19 per cent.

“Adoption alone does not guarantee meaningful workplace impact in Singapore,” said Zhang.




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