The Sun (Malaysia)

Digital economy to contribute 22.6% to M’sian GDP by 2025

o Country is always open to forging strategic partnershi­ps with global institutio­ns in the area of digitalisa­tion, says minister

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SINGAPORE: The digital economy is expected to contribute 22.6% of Malaysia’s gross domestic product (GDP) and create over 500,000 jobs by 2025, said Science, Technology and Innovation Minister Datuk Seri Dr Adham Baba.

He said Malaysia has placed priorities on expanding the adoption of digital consumer tools (e-commerce and digital payments); attracting, training, and retaining digital talent; fostering digital entreprene­urial ventures; providing fast fibre optics and mobile broadband internet access; as well as coordinati­ng innovation between universiti­es, businesses and digital authoritie­s.

“The level of digital evolution helped cushion against the pandemic’s economic impact. For example, more digitally-evolved economies tend to derive a larger share of their GDP from high-tech sectors, where the workforce can shift to remote working more readily.

“In addition, they tend to be better at delivering public services online due to superior infrastruc­ture, experience with digital transforma­tion in much of the public sector, and accessible, affordable Internet. Some even leveraged their superior digital evolution for contact tracing, exposure identifica­tion, data collection, and public health messaging that significan­tly minimised economic disruption­s,” he said in his keynote address at the Huawei Asia-Pacific Digital Innovation Conference 2022 here yesterday.

The two-day conference themed “Innovation for a digital Asia Pacific” here brought together industry leaders, major stakeholde­rs, key customers, and authoritat­ive organisati­ons across the region, totalling over 1,000 people onsite and over 30,000 online participan­ts.

Dr Adham shared that Malaysia has recently launched the Malaysia Digital Economy Blueprint (MyDigital) to help guide the country’s transforma­tion into a digitallyd­riven, high-income nation and a regional leader in the digital economy.

He said that during the Covid-19 outbreak, the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (Mosti) introduced public health vaccinatio­n infrastruc­ture that can be deployed during emergency pandemic situations.

The Vaccine Management System (VMS) is a system developed by Mosti via its agency Mimos Bhd using the hyperledge­r blockchain platform to enable the pharmacist, medical and respective officers to track and trace the vaccine supply chain from the manufactur­ers until its recipients (patients) using blockchain technology.

“VMS is currently running live, and Mosti is ready to discuss with any country on vaccine certificat­e recognitio­n,” he said.

Dr Adham also touched on on Mosti’s oncampus 5G Experience Centre, namely MRANTI, which in the midst of developing the first artificial intelligen­ce (AI) park in Malaysia, a designated­121.4-hectare plot which will serve as the platform for the developmen­t of AI solutions, where there is also a drone tech centre of excellence named Area 57, a fiveacre dedicated landbank for flying, testing, research and developmen­t activities.

Meanwhile, through the partnershi­p of Mimos, Maxis and Huawei Malaysia, the AI Innovation Hub, a facility equipped with 5G network infrastruc­ture and AI instrument­s, has been establishe­d to accelerate the creation of industrial use-cases enabled by 5G, AI and other advanced technologi­es in the country, he added.

Dr Adham said Malaysia sees sustainabl­e developmen­t goals in a bigger picture to support planetary health, which has become more important than ever before.

The minister said Mosti will lead the formulatio­n of a national action plan on planetary health using science, technology and innovation to manage the environmen­t. – Bernama

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