Global AI leaders continue to bet on Singapore as a trusted digital node in a fracturing world. Now, a new frontier is coming into focus: Agentic AI. The question is: Will we double down or retreat?
On April 2, the United States announced a broad-based 10 percent tariff on all imports as part of its latest trade measures. The policy is applied uniformly across trading partners, including long-standing economic partners like Singapore, with whom the U.S. runs a trade surplus.
Built on the principles of free trade, this marks a significant inflection point for Singapore. As Prime Minister Lawrence Wong warned in his recent S. Rajaratnam Lecture: “The global order we took for granted is fraying, and the risks of fragmentation and disorder are growing.” For small, open economies like Singapore, this development poses existential risks.
Yet it’s precisely in this moment of global fragility that Singapore must respond with clarity and conviction – in the technological and digital infrastructure we’ve built, the talent we’ve nurtured, and the transformation model we’ve pursued.
Keeping faith in AI investments
As AI funding accelerates across the region, the focus is shifting from ambition to execution—where returns on infrastructure, talent, and tools must now be proven in real business terms.
Singapore has committed over S$1 billion from 2024 to 2029 under its National AI Strategy 2.0, including up to S$500 million for advanced chips and compute infrastructure, S$150 million for enterprise AI adoption, and S$120 million for AI-driven scientific research. More than S$20 million will also go toward scholarships and training to triple the national AI talent pool to over 15,000 practitioners. These investments must now pay off in productivity, efficiency, and margin resilience.
Across Asia Pacific, businesses implementing AI and automation are expected to achieve 20 to 30 percent reductions in operational costs and over 40 percent gains in efficiency. Deloitte’s Global Intelligent Automation survey found that organizations that advanced their automation efforts reported average cost savings of 32 percent. Forrester highlights that AI-powered automation can reduce operational costs by up to 30 percent, particularly by optimizing workflows and reducing human error. And 72 percent of data and IT leaders surveyed in the Dataiku 2025 GenAI Trends Report, admitted to positive returns on investment from their generative AI projects.
Amid the tariff uncertainty, every percentage-point in enterprise savings and efficiency counts.
Doubling-down on Singapore’s AI future
In Singapore, AI-readiness is the result of years of sustained investment, forward-looking policy, and strong public-private collaboration. Global firms like Amazon, Google, and Microsoft are deepening their presence through long-term investments–part of the S$13.5 billion in overall commitments made in 2024 alone, reflecting strong confidence in Singapore’s digital infrastructure and talent base.
For instance, Amazon Web Services (AWS) announced a S$12 billion investment in Singapore’s cloud infrastructure through 2028. Alongside this, AWS launched AI Spring Singapore, a flagship collaboration with government and industry aligned to National AI Strategy 2.0, aiming to train 5,000 individuals in AI annually from 2024 to 2026.
AWS is not alone. Universal AI Platform Dataiku, which has established its regional headquarters in Singapore, powers blue-chip organisations across the region–including Standard Chartered, Maybank, Auckland Transport, and Security Bank in the Philippines. Beyond commercial success, Dataiku has supported NTU’s pioneering Early Alert for Learning Intervention (EARLI) project, which achieved over 70 percent accuracy in identifying students who genuinely needed help–improving retention and academic outcomes.
In other words, global AI leaders continue to bet on Singapore as a trusted digital node in a fracturing world. Now, a new frontier is coming into focus: Agentic AI.
Agentic AI as digital backbone
AI is no longer just a tool waiting for instructions—Agentic AI marks the emergence of systems that act with purpose, autonomy, and impact.
Unlike traditional AI systems that wait for human prompts, Agentic AI refers to autonomous systems that make decisions, take actions, and adapt in real time to achieve defined goals. Picture intelligent agents that don’t just detect financial anomalies but launch mitigation steps, or healthcare systems that not only identify at-risk patients but automatically schedule interventions, adjust treatment protocols, and coordinate with care teams. This shift from passive tools to active, goal-oriented systems signals a profound change in how organizations will operate with greater efficiency and effect.
Yet with autonomy comes complexity. As agents proliferate across business functions, organizations face mounting governance and security risks. Models evolve rapidly, costs are difficult to monitor, and without oversight, enterprises risk compliance gaps, technical debt, and uncontrolled access to data. IT teams are increasingly caught between building their own guardrails, locking into single vendors, or permitting open exploration – each with risks to scale and control.
To become a true digital backbone, Agentic AI must be deployed with governance at its core. This means centralizing agent creation, ensuring rigorous oversight, and embedding tools for continuous performance and cost monitoring from the outset. Globally, pilot programs in healthcare, finance, and education already report up to 40 percent efficiency gains and 30 to 50 percent time savings in administrative functions.
Unsurprisingly, the Agentic AI market in Asia Pacific is expected to grow at a staggering compound annual rate of 49.9 percent, surpassing S$10 billion by 2030. In Singapore demographic shifts are accelerating. In fact, one in four citizens will be aged 65 and above by 2030, and the old-age support ratio will fall from 3.7 today to just 2.7. This means Agentic AI is not just an opportunity, but a necessity. As labour-driven growth comes under increasing strain, there is a growing imperative for technologies that can enhance productivity and service quality without adding to headcount pressures.
Agentic AI isn’t just the next frontier in automation—it’s the operating layer for a more resilient, efficient, and adaptive enterprise.
Over 60 years, Singapore has weathered crisis after crisis – emerging stronger each time through foresight, unity, and skill. As the rules-based global order frays, this is not the time to retreat, but to double down on the digital foundations we’ve laid. And in tech’s next chapter, Agentic AI stands out as an enabler of national resilience, relevance, and reach in a more uncertain world.
JY Pook is the Senior Vice President & General Manager of Asia Pacific & Japan for Dataiku, The Universal AI Platform™. He brings an extensive background in leading digital transformations and go-to-market strategies in the technology sector of APJ, including nearly 12 years helming Tableau, Salesforce in the region.
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Feature image by Rinson Chory on Unsplash
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