A large number of SMEs in Singapore believe that AI will have a significant impact on business productivity.
The latest QBE Insurance’s Singapore SME Survey has revealed that SMEs are increasingly aware of cyber risks but remain hesitant (68%) to purchase cyber insurance. This year, two-thirds (66%) of survey respondents find increased costs and reduced profitability their number one business challenge, versus just half last year. Likewise, 56% are concerned with growing sales and reduced customer spending today, compared to 40% 12 months ago. Regarding company finances in areas like managing cash flow and access to funding, 51% are experiencing difficulties, in comparison to 36% found in 2024's survey.
Accordingly, the economic outlook for the next 12 months is less positive than a year ago. Only 52% of respondents believe this year will be better than the past 12 months, versus 60% last year. Some 70% feel that increasing operating costs will impact the economy negatively, while 60% feel rising inflation and a GST increase will also impact the economy. SME executives are similarly downbeat about the performance of their respective businesses: in the 2024 survey, 62% of respondents believed sales during the ensuing year would be better, compared to 55% this year.
Over half (52%) of respondents said AI has a significant impact on business productivity, up from 49% a year earlier. Of note, 55% of survey respondents don't believe AI will replace jobs in their respective companies.
While SMEs are upbeat about the current and future trajectory of AI, they are also wary of the risks the technology poses. Some 34% said it presents a threat to business activity — up from 30% last year.
Concern for the top AI risks among SME professionals is significantly more widespread than in previous years. The threat of AI replacing jobs was cited by 68% of respondents, versus just 17% last year — around 25% of Singapore SMEs foresee jobs in customer service, finance and accounting to be fully replaced by AI within three years, while 22% expect roles in routine manual work and labour-intensive tasks to be fully replaced after six years. In addition, 66% of SME leaders have AI-related privacy concerns in contrast just 10% in 2024; and 51% are anxious about AI-linked security breaches, compared to 15% a year earlier.
While awareness of the pitfalls of AI is on the rise, knowledge of cyber risks is declining: just 40% of Singaporean SMEs believe they are fully informed of the risks, down from 47% a year earlier. This may be one reason behind the proportion of businesses experiencing a slight increase in cyber events, from 25% to 27% year-on-year.
SMEs are actively seeking solutions to meet cyber threats across a wide range of measures. However, these don't include insurance, where the proportion of businesses covered has dropped from 38% to 36%. Of the 68% of respondents who do not have any form of cyber insurance, 51% would consider purchasing it, while 15% would categorically not consider it. The top reasons behind this stance include cost; the fact that their business doesn't store data; and the perceived low impact of such events on their businesses.