Logo
Home
language
Loading...

How Manufacturing Is Powering Singapore's Economic Growth

聞く/Video/CNBC International/How Manufacturing Is Powering Singapore's Economic Growth

How Manufacturing Is Powering Singapore's Economic Growth

CNBC International
3000 Oxford Words4000 IELTS Words5000 Oxford Words3000 Common Words1000 TOEIC Words5000 TOEFL Words

字幕 (40)

0:002025 was a pretty good year for the so-called  'Little Red Dot' as Singapore is known.
0:06Despite trade uncertainties, the island's economy  
0:08blew past expectations — one of  the key drivers? Manufacturing.
0:14It's something not often associated with  the city-state — but represents about 20%  
0:19of GDP — and proved resilient to the  shock of U.S. tariffs. And we’re not  
0:23talking about spokes and widgets. We're  talking about sectors like biomedicals.
0:29And advanced products from electronics clusters,  
0:31which are riding the wave of blistering  demand for AI-related semiconductors  
0:35and servers. The government plays an  active role in laying the groundwork  
0:39for an advanced manufacturing ecosystem, that  seeks to attrack top talent and investment.
0:44First of all, we have been present  in Singapore for more than 50 years.  
0:48So we all we, as I said, we feel at  home here in Singapore. Number one,  
0:53number two, tell us, has always been highly  supported by the Singaporean authorities. 
1:00Why so? Because they do have a lot of appetite  for technologies, including, I would say,  
1:05new technologies in the manufacturing field.  Hence the fact that we are supported in this  
1:10domain by Singapore to grow our footprint  here, in particular, producing more banking  
1:16cards or SIM cards, with more automated  industry, with robots, cohorts and allies.
1:23Manufacturing was one of the key drivers that  helped Singapore become one of the so-called  
1:27"Asian Tigers" in the early 1980s. But with a  small domestic market and limited labor pool,  
1:33the country had to pivot aggressively to find  new sources of growth. Its Manufacturing 2030  
1:39initiative — launched in 2021 — aims to expand  the sector's value-added output by 50% by 2030.
1:46Today, advanced-manufacturing investments  have poured in from major players across a  
1:50wide range of sectors, including global  pharmaceutical giants AstraZeneca,  
1:55Sanofi, and Novartis… As well as leading  technology firms like Micron, GE Aerospace,  
2:01and GlobalFoundries. Now, the challenge is  for Singapore to keep its competitive edge.
2:07Because even with its supercharged  manufacturing sector — the government  
2:10has warned that sustaining the economic  momentum from 2025 is going to be challenging.
2:16Well, there's a couple of factors. One. One is,  if Singapore doesn't have a fresh talent pipeline  
2:23that they're either developing or bringing in from  the outside, it's going to be difficult to keep up  
2:28with a lot of these, these new kind of angles,  right, that that are that are linked directly  
2:33to technology. That's number one. Number two,  from a geopolitical perspective, Singapore is  
2:40vulnerable when it comes to, for example, the  critical technology stacks that drive all of  
2:48these industries, right? So you've, of course,  we start with rare earths and critical minerals.  
2:54Then we go on to chips themselves. Then we're  looking at networks and the internet of things,  
2:59right? We're looking at software. We're looking  at, ultimately, AI. So for Singapore, the secret  
3:05sauce is always going to be AI, which is at  the end of this very critical, now increasingly  
3:11bifurcated technology stack between the United  States and China from a geopolitical standpoint.
3:18Still, the country could expect a global  AI upcycle to be sustained into this year,  
3:22which the Monetary Authority of Singapore says,  
3:24will likely provide near-term support  for Singapore's trade-related sectors.