Singapore to spend $120m to fight tech talent shortage

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The refrain is familiar by now: Singapore’s tech startup ecosystem lacks technical talent, particularly in the engineering/programming/coding fronts. It was the one thing the city-state scored really low on in the Compass’ Startup Ecosystem Ranking 2015 report.

That’s why the government is taking steps to address it. The Ministry of Communications and Information (MCI) today announced it will tackle the problem by setting aside S$120 million for training information and communication technology (ICT) professionals.

Minister Yaacob Ibrahim said the ministry anticipates an additional 30,000 ICT jobs that need to be filled by 2020. The ministry will organise an Industry Preparation for Pre-Graduates (iPrep) Program that will aim to get 6,000 students from each cohort of the Code@SG initiative co-organised by the Infocomm Development Authority (IDA).

Through iPrep, the IDA will work with universities to prepare students for internships and mentorships so they can get the work experience employers usually look for.

The minister also said the MCI will partner with more private companies and industry players to boost the TechSkills Accelerator, announced during the Budget 2016 speech. Finance minister Heng Swee Keat said at the time that the accelerator will help “pioneer a new way of enabling our people to acquire expertise and skills.”

Read the full article here

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Monday, April 11, 2016 – 18:47
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