As artificial intelligence (AI) reshapes jobs and industries, one question matters most: how can AI create better jobs and not just better business?
For NTUC, the answer is clear. AI must lead to better wages, stronger job prospects, and more sustainable careers for workers in Singapore—not just productivity gains for employers.
Being AI-ready amidst digital transformation is not about replacing workers with technology. It is about equipping workers with AI skills, redesigning jobs thoughtfully, and ensuring fair outcomes as work changes.
NTUC launched the AI Career Coach (AICC) in 2025 to directly support jobseekers.
Designed as a self-guided platform, AICC empowers workers to take charge of their careers in an AI-augmented economy by offering:
With the AICC, NTUC shows how AI career support in Singapore can be accessible, scalable and worker centric.
AI policy matters as much as AI tools.
In Parliament, Labour MPs continue to advocate for an AI transition that is skills-first and worker-centred, calling for:
The message is consistent: AI jobs in Singapore must be fair, transparent and inclusive.
The NTUC Company Training Committees (CTCs) bring together management and worker representatives to plan a transformation that benefits both the business and workers.
Supported by the NTUC CTC Grant, companies can implement AI and technology projects linked to:
Tan Tock Seng Hospital leverages NTUC's Company Training Committee to improve skills of workers and productivity.
Ahead of Budget 2026, NTUC also called for stronger support for older workers in the AI era, highlighting age-inclusive job redesign initiatives, such as the one at Tan Tock Seng Hospital, supported through the CTC framework.
These projects reduce administrative burden, improve workload distribution, ensure an inclusive workforce, and allow experienced workers to move into higher-value roles such as mentoring and workforce planning.
NTUC LearningHub plays an important role in delivering AI training pathways for workers in Singapore, including applied Generative AI elements such as:
This ensures workers gain both technical confidence and sound judgement.
AI also changes not just tasks, but leadership expectations.
That is why NTUC LearningHub launched the Leadership Academy, focusing on human skills that complement AI:
The academy works with partners such as Harvard Business Impact and TAFEP and offers pathways aligned with IHRP Responsible People Manager standards.
Strong leadership helps ensure AI-driven change builds trust, not fear.
AI and digital media are reshaping how unions engage workers.
To stay relevant, unions must recruit members, communicate clearly online, and counter misinformation. That is why the Ong Teng Cheong Labour Leadership Institute (OTCi) focused on equipping union leaders with digital and AI knowledge.
Training included:
These capabilities strengthen unions’ ability to support workers in an AI-driven economy.
In 2024, career coaches at NTUC’s Employment and Employability Institute (e2i) began using the Virtual Career Coach (VCC), an AI-powered tool that helps coaches:
Importantly, AI does not replace human judgement. It augments career coaches, allowing them to provide more timely and personalised support to jobseekers navigating AI-driven job changes.
NTUC does not just advocate AI adoption; it actively applies AI across the Labour Movement.
Led by the Transformation Office, NTUC has introduced AI and data-driven capabilities to improve services for members while strengthening organisational effectiveness.
This ensures that when NTUC supports companies and unions, it does so with real implementation experience.
To support AI workforce transformation, NTUC has invested in a future-ready, cloud-based data infrastructure that enables:
To build confidence in using data, NTUC also co-organised the InnoJan Hackathon (Data Analytics), enabling staff across departments to collaborate on real data projects and strengthen digital fluency.
To foster collaboration, the Transformation Office actively brings unions and NTUC entities together to share AI knowledge and use cases:
These efforts position NTUC as a digitally capable Labour Movement that leverages AI to better serve workers.
AI will reshape work, but the outcome is not fixed.
By combining AI upskilling for workers in Singapore, responsible AI adoption, job redesign through CTCs, and human-centric leadership development, NTUC is demonstrating what a fair and inclusive AI transition looks like in practice.
The goal remains clear: better business, better jobs, better wages, and better work prospects, so no worker is left behind.
Companies can partner with NTUC to set up a Company Training Committee (CTC) to support job redesign and workplace transformation.